Louisiana Community and Technical College System Board of Supervisors

The Louisiana Community and Technical College System’s Board consists of 17 members. The LCTCS Board is composed of 15 members appointed by the Governor with consent of the Senate, two from each of the six congressional districts with three at-large members. Each member serves overlapping six-year terms, and the Board is constitutionally required to be representative of the state’s population by race and gender to ensure diversity.

There are two student members – one elected by and from membership of a council composed of the student body presidents of the community colleges and one student elected by and from the membership of a council composed of student body presidents of the technical colleges under the supervision and management of the LCTCS Board. Each student member serves a one-year term.

Central Louisiana Technical Community College is governed by the Louisiana Community & Technical College System Board of Supervisors. Listed below are the system president, board officers, board members, and student board members (as of publication).

SYSTEM PRESIDENT

Dr. Monty Sullivan

265 South Foster Drive

Baton Rouge, LA 70806

BOARD OFFICERS

Willie Mount, Chair

Alterman "Chip" Jackson, First Vice Chair

Rhoman J. Hardy, Second Vice Chair

STUDENT BOARD MEMBERS

Matthew Durrett

Franchesca Jimenez

BOARD MEMBERS

Paul Price, Jr., Immediate Past Chair

Ellis Bourque

Tari T. Bradford

Cynthia Butler-McIntyre

Timothy W. Hardy

Jennifer Lee

Erika McConduit

Michael “Mickey” Murphy

Stanton Salathe

Stephen Smith

Craig Spohn

Stephen Toups

 

History of the Louisiana Community and Technical College System

Louisiana’s post-secondary technical education system was established in 1999 by a Constitutional Amendment. It is constitutionally governed by the Louisiana Community and Technical College System Board of Supervisors (LCTCS Board), which was appointed by the Governor. Prior to 1999, the Technical College System was governed by the State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education/Board of Vocational Education.

Since the 1930s, vocational education has been afforded to the citizens of Louisiana through a system of post-secondary technical education, which also provides technical training to secondary high school students. In 1973, the Legislature passed Acts 208 and 209. Act 208 provided for the reorganization of the state trade schools and increased their number from 33 to 53. This act placed a vocational-technical school within a 25-mile driving distance for any citizen requiring vocational training. Act 209 was a companion bill that provided funds for expanding post-secondary vocational-technical education authorized in Act 208.

An initial $100 million in capital outlay investment in Louisiana’s technical training opportunities established Louisiana as a national leader in workforce preparation through post-secondary technical education in up-to-date facilities.

The Louisiana vocational-technical education system originally began as “trade schools” in the thirties and has evolved to vocational schools – vocational-technical schools – vocational-technical institutes – and at present, technical college, as a result of a redesigned curriculum, which blends technical and applied academics ultimately leading to a certificate, diploma, and/or the associate of applied science degree, the credential of preference by many business, industry, and labor interests The LCTCS Board established one technical college comprised of 40 campuses which offer training programs to approximately 50,000 students. The name change to technical college is reflective of the blending of technical and applied academic education. The system is presently providing a standardized curriculum for careers ranging from automotive technology to biomedical technology, which affords students the ability for full transfer of credits from one CLTCC campus to another.