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Connecticut has lost a higher
percentage of its
25-to-34-year-old population
since 2000 than any other state
in the nation. In 2006, nearly
half of all high school seniors
seeking higher education went to
out-of-state universities; many
probably never to return. An
estimated 5,000 to 6,000
Connecticut residents, who
graduated from the Connecticut
State Universities (Western,
Central, Southern, and Eastern),
left the state to find work in
2005. Although some 85 percent
of CSUS graduates remain in
state, that is still a
significant loss.
Losing young, educated persons
bodes ill for a state where
economic health depends upon
competing with the best and
brightest throughout the world.
Business leaders surveyed in
2007, in the New
Britain-Hartford-Springfield
corridor, cited the availability
of qualified workers as the
second greatest challenge to
their successful operations.
They thought it would get worse
in the next five years and that
businesses and universities must
work in concert to entice more
students to live and work here.
Compounding the loss is an aging
population and the retirement of
“baby boomers” that is on the
horizon. Retaining their
knowledge will require qualified
youth able to get on-the-job
apprentice experience and be
mentored in the work
environment.
The Institute for Municipal and
Regional Policy (IMRP) at
Central Connecticut State
University is seeking the
reasons for this statewide out
migration and the strategies
that will stop the loss of this
essential talent. In order to
more fully and personally
explore this issue, the IMRP is
collaborating with Hartford’s
HartBeat Theater Ensemble and
Portland, Oregon’s Sojourn
Theatre to directly engage
youth, both in an education
setting and in the workplace,
who are confronting (or will
soon be ) the choice of leaving
or staying in Connecticut. The
theater groups use an innovative
approach of interactive dialogue
coupled with fact-based
theatrical enactments to
intensive and clarify specific
themes.
“We have traditionally taken a
top-down approach to developing
and implementing local and
regional solutions to accepted
problems in Connecticut.
Legislative theater is a great
way of pulling the expertise out
of our communities, and letting
them guide us in both framing
the issues and recommending
concrete solutions,” says Andrew
Clark, director of the IMRP. The
purpose is to provide a voice
that will shape future state
policy.
Thus far, ensemble workshops
have been conducted at Central
Connecticut State University,
the University of Hartford,
Trinity College, Capital
Community College, Hartford City
Hall and the Legislative Office
Building.
Many factors influence where
young people choose to live.
Many in the state are focusing
on employment and affordable
housing as ways to encourage
them to reside in CT. However,
as has been learned in the
IMRP’s ensemble workshops, for
many young people a suitable
place to live takes precedence
over job considerations. They
are looking for diversity,
activity, interaction and
stimulating community life.
Understanding this concept is
important for cities like New
Britain that are trying to
reinvent themselves. Portland,
Oregon, Seattle, Washington and
Boston, Massachusetts have
attracted large, diverse, young
populations and are excellent
examples of this cultural
phenomenon. Retaining our youth
must be addressed by the state
and its cities; our economic
future depends on it.
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