U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley today announced that the Baker Technical Institute has secured a $147,203 federal grant to increase access to health care training for rural students in remote and frontier areas of Eastern Oregon.
The rural development investment in the Baker facility will allow it to establish a state-of-the-art distance learning system that lets students participate in health care classes remotely at the Morrow County Health District in Heppner, Blue Mountain Hospital in John Day, Harney District Hospital in Burns, and Wallowa Memorial Hospital in Enterprise.
“Eastern Oregon benefits in a big way from this good news that taps into technology to educate the health care providers of tomorrow in rural communities,” Wyden said. “The importance of telemedicine and distance learning has been magnified during the coronavirus pandemic.”
“High quality, reliable broadband internet service has never been more important than it is right now — especially for our students who are learning remotely, and for our health care providers who are working around the clock to provide exceptional care and essential services to their communities,” said Merkley.
This distance learning grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture also will provide access to a Certified Nursing Assistant program and courses in phlebotomy, medical assistant training, emergency medicine, and medical terminology.
“This grant allows us to provide state-of-the-art equipment so rural students can learn and even meet clinical practice requirements through distance learning,” said Baker Technical Institute President Doug Dalton.