Home Local News Duke Energy Foundation grant supports growing substation program

Duke Energy Foundation grant supports growing substation program

David McNeill, district manager for Duke Energy, (left) holds an oversized check with Dr. Dale McInnis, president of Richmond Community College, representing the $50,000 grant Duke is awarding the Electric Utility Substation and Relay Technology program. Pictured with them are college faculty, staff and EUSRT students.
RichmondCC

HAMLET — Duke Energy continues its investment in Richmond Community College’s Electric Utility Substation and Relay Technology program to help build a skilled workforce for the utility industry. The Duke Energy Foundation awarded a $50,000 grant to the College in support of its EUSRT program that prepares students to become relay technicians and transformer test specialist. 

The EUSRT program at RichmondCC is the first of its kind in the state of North Carolina and only offered at a handful of colleges nationwide. Established in partnership between RichmondCC and Duke Energy, the EUSRT program prepares students for lucrative careers in the electric utility industry and other industries that rely on complex control systems. 

“Duke Energy has been a gracious and loyal partner of this program since its inception in 2011,  and this grant represents only a fraction of what Duke Energy has invested this program over the years,” said Dr. Dale McInnis, president of RichmondCC. “Because of Duke Energy’s continued support, the substation program has grown in enrollment, depth and diversity and is impacting the future success of many students.”

The EUSRT program graduated its largest class in May with 58 students earning the associate degree. The Class of 2019 was also the most diverse. Over 50 percent of the graduates were minorities and 9 percent were females.

Advertisements

Students in the EUSRT program learn how to maintain transmission equipment and troubleshoot when problems arise. Courses include theory in three-phase power, protective relaying, power transformers, voltage regulators, capacitors and power circuit breakers. These skills apply to the electric utility industry and numerous other industries. Graduates of the program are sought after by leading companies in the industry, and there are relay technicians from RichmondCC working all over the country due to the high demand for their skill set. The average entry level salary for a relay technician is $60,000 a year, plus overtime pay and stipends for travel and relocation.

“We’re proud to continue our long-standing partnership with Richmond Community College that’s developing the adaptable, highly-skilled workforce our sector needs to modernize our energy grid,” said David McNeill, district manager for Duke Energy.

The Duke Energy Foundation’s Powerful Communities program makes strategic investments to build powerful communities where our natural resources thrive, students can excel and a talented workforce drives economic prosperity for all. The Foundation annually funds more than $30 million to communities throughout Duke Energy’s seven-state service area. 



Previous articleAnesthesiologist Lauren Sylvester, M.D., on a mission as new provider at FirstHealth Back & Neck Pain
Next articleCarolyn Wagner