
By Annabeth Miller, SMT Editor
It’s been a busy year for the folks at Three Rivers College, but it is all a part of a ‘Golden Age’ for community colleges in the nation.
Dr. Devin Stephenson spoke about a year filled with growth for the community college during a luncheon with his Dexter President’s Advisory Committee on Wednesday. The luncheon was attended by more than 30 leaders in business, government and education from the Stoddard County area. The lunch meeting was held in the Chamber of Commerce Conference Room adjacent to the college center on Market Street.
Stephenson assumed the leadership position at the Southeast Missouri college in July 2009, and he has been on a fast track since his arrival in the area. And the college has been on a fast track as well, riding the crest of a wave of growth for community colleges nationwide.
The opening of the Dexter center in January of this year is just one of many developments with the college. Where 12 months ago there were no students enrolled at the local center, today they are preparing for Spring 2012 semester that will include more than 200 area students.
Stephenson announced yesterday that the college has even greater plans in store for the Dexter facility – in growth in programs, growth in the number of students enrolled locally, and growth in the facility.
“Over the last six months we have been looking at what we can do here,” Stephenson told those gathered for the luncheon meeting. “We have applied for a $2.1 million grant to build a conference/convention center that will be attached to this building or close to this building. We feel very confident that we are going to be approved for that.”
Stephenson said the college will have to match that grant with approximately a half million
“It will give Dexter – it will give our college – a place if we wanted to have a banquet or seminars, then we could do that here close. We have the vision,” he said. “We can utilize it in a really powerful way.”
Stephenson was joined with Dr. Wes Payne, vice president of learning, local coordinators Bill Hampton and Ann Matthews, and other college personnel.
Payne pointed out that the Green Diesel program offered at the Dexter campus is one of only two green diesel training programs in the county.
“I think the ‘calling card’ that was placed here is the Green Diesel program,” Payne said. “It started fairly small, and it’s through the roof right now. It is a program that is unique. Every student that comes out of this program – if they want one – will have a job.”
Payne noted that the college already has business partners asking when students will graduate and be ready to enter the job market, due to the high demand for trained mechanics.
“We also want to looked at student’s needs and where they are going,” he said. “My goal is to get as many programs that are viable approved and in place so that students can progress through the Dexter Center and out the other side as graduates.”
Photo Above: Dr. Devin Stephenson, president of Three Rivers College, speaks to a luncheon meeting in Dexter on Wednesday. Behind the college president is Dr. Wes Payne, vice president of learning at the college, and Dexter center coordinator Bill Hampton. (SMT Photo by Annabeth Miller)
Links Of Interest
TRC Fast Facts 1

The Christmas season is fast approaching. For most it is a season of giving.
Many elderly in our community are alone and may not get to be in on the receiving end of the season. So each year, Missouri Southern Healthcare puts together an Angel Tree, to bring joy to those nursing home and residential care residents.
"Our Angel Tree has been going on for nearly 15 years," said Sue Swift, Certified Nurse Assistant at Missouri Southern Healthcare. "The way it works is that we contact the nursing homes and residential care centers and ask them for residents who don’t have any family around."
Swift said the facilities provided the names along with things the named individuals needed, like clothes in specified sizes; and wanted, like books, candy or for some women, makeup.
"We ask for about 10 per facility," she said.
Swift said such individuals might lack a family because the family members have all moved off, or even all passed away. But whatever the reason, she said, she and co-worker Jeanette Powell compiled the names, identified them by number and put the numbers on a paper cutout angel on a Christmas at the ICU/CCU nurses' station.
"This year we had a total of 86," Swift said. The names come from senior care or living facilities in Malden, Essex, Dexter, Bloomfield and Puxico.
The angels remain on the tree until someone from the hospital or community “adopts” an angel and purchases the desired items listed on the front of the angel. The person who adopts the angel then wraps the items and labels them with the appropriate number of the adopted angel.
"It's totally anonymous," Swift said, "And it's not just the hospital staff that adopts. "We welcome members of the community to come in, also."
If you are interested in “adopting” an angel, you may stop by Missouri Southern Healthcare and do so.
Once all gifts have been received for the Angels, Swift and Powell divide up the gifts and deliver them to the various facilities.
The goal is to have all the gifts delivered before the given facility holds its Christmas party.
"That way they will be able to get something at the party," Swift said.
In addition, she continued, the facility holds a gift or two back for presentation on Christmas Day.
"That way they get to have a Christmas even though they may not have a family to get it for them," Swift said. "And they deserve it. These are the neediest in our community.
"And since they served us, when we were young, it's time for us to serve them."
Families, individuals or groups who would like to adopt an Angel from the tree at Missouri Southern Healthcare may do so by visiting the medical center by Dec. 12. Just ask a Auxiliary member at the front desk about "adopting a Christmas angel."

SMT News Report
Did we really think we would wake up to a winter wonderland? Just days after Thanksgiving? But a front moved into Southeast Missouri on Monday and left behind a blanket of snow, sloppy roadways, and a bevy of schools that are closed on Tuesday.
The list of schools includes
- Bernie
- Bloomfield
- Campbell
- Dexter
- Dexter Adult Education & GED
- Dexter Head Start
- Southeast Missouri State University @ Malden, Sikeston & Kennett – Delay 3 hours
- Richland
- Risco
- Stoddard County ARC
- Three Rivers College – Delay 2 hours
The National Weather Service forecast for Tuesday calls for rain, possibily mixed with more snow before noon, this a slight chance of rain. The high Tuesday will be 41.
Tuesday night should be clear with a low around 26. The forecast for Wednesday calls for sunshine to return with a high near 44.
POPLAR BLUFF - Captain George E. Ridens, commanding officer of Troop E of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, announced that during the month of December 2011, the Patrol will conduct a sobriety checkpoint and a driving while intoxicated saturation in the region.
The sobriety checkpoint will be in Butler County, and the saturation will be in Butler, Cape Girardeau, Scott, Stoddard, Dunklin, Pemiscot, and New Madrid counties. The operation will be conducted by the Missouri State Highway Patrol in cooperation with other local area law enforcement agencies.
The checkpoint is a static operation on a specific highway that is designed to check every driver to ensure they are sober. The driving while intoxicated saturation is a mobile operation in which troopers saturate a specific area in an effort to arrest intoxicated drivers.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol urges all citizens to report any vehicle they observe operating in a careless manner. The public can contact the Highway Patrol toll-free at 1-800-525-5555 or on their cellular phone at *55.

Extremely windy weather, combined with reduced deer populations in some areas, dropped the opening-weekend harvest 10,000 below the 2010 figure. Hunters persevered, however, and more than made up lost ground in the following nine days of the November hunt. In the end, they harvested 1,884 more than last year, a 1-percent increase.
Top harvest counties were Howell with 3,483 deer checked, Macon with 3,393 and Texas with 3,284. The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) recorded six firearms-related deer-hunting accidents during the November hunt, down from nine last year.
MDC Resource Scientist Jason Sumners said changes to hunting regulations over the past 20 years are responsible for producing more large-antlered deer.
Sumners noted that in 2003, antlered deer made up 37 percent of the November firearms deer harvest. Last year, 40 percent of the harvest consisted of antlered deer. This year, the figure was 43 percent. This narrowing of the gap between doe and buck harvest began with implementation of the four-point rule for antlered deer in 2004.
MDC Director Bob Ziehmer hailed this year’s deer harvest numbers as good news for all Missourians.
“A robust firearms deer harvest is proof of a healthy deer herd that benefits all Missourians, whether they hunt or not,” said Ziehmer. “Resident deer hunters and a significant number of hunters from out of state spend approximately $700 million on their sport. That spending generates more than $1 billion in business activity. In all, deer hunting supports 11,000 Missouri jobs. In these economic times, that’s a big boost to the state’s economy.”