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Texas program offers students education, experience

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (front row, center), visited with TACA president Andrew Pinkerton (second row, fifth from left) and other TACA members during the Texas State University Concrete Industry Management program. (Photo: TACA)
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (front row, center), visited with TACA president Andrew Pinkerton (second row, fifth from left) and other TACA members during the Texas State University Concrete Industry Management program. (Photo: TACA)

Leaders from across Texasconstruction materials industry gathered at the Texas State University Concrete Industry Management program’s (TXST CIM) scholarship gala to celebrate its mission of advancing education, workforce development and leadership in the sector.

The CIM program, through the help of its National Steering Committee & Patron’s Board Foundation, provides more than $100,000 in scholarships to TXST CIM students annually to pursue careers in the aggregates, concrete and cement industries. It also offers students specialized education in aggregates, concrete and construction materials, connecting classroom learning with real-world industry experience. Five universities in the U.S. offer a CIM degree program, including Texas State University, alongside programs in Tennessee, New Jersey, South Dakota and California.

Gov. Greg Abbott (R-Texas), Texas state Senator Pete Flores and other industry leaders joined members of the Texas Aggregates & Concrete Association (TACA), including TACA president and CEO Andrew Pinkerton, in recognizing the program’s growing impact across Texas.

Abbott highlighted the importance of workforce development programs like CIM in supporting Texas’ continued economic expansion and infrastructure growth.

“This program transforms the lives of everybody it touches,” Abbott says. “CIM graduates have 100 percent job placement and earn the highest salary of any degree on campus. CIM graduates don’t just pour foundations; they become foundations that form the future of the great state of Texas.”

Flores emphasized the critical need to strengthen the state’s workforce pipeline. Drawing on his own story – growing up in Laredo and beginning his career as a young game warden before rising to the Texas Senate – Flores encouraged students to recognize the opportunities ahead.

He says CIM students are stepping into a workforce demand that has too often gone unmet. Flores also spent time engaging directly with students before and after the program, underscoring the importance of mentorship and industry connection.

TACA says its member companies have long supported CIM through scholarships, mentorship and industry engagement, helping ensure a strong pipeline of talent to meet the demands of one of the nation’s fastest-growing states.

“CIM is helping build the next generation of leaders who will quite literally shape the future of Texas,” says Pinkerton, who serves on the CIM’s National Steering Committee. “As our state continues to grow, the need for a skilled, well-trained workforce in construction materials has never been more critical. We are proud to support a program that is preparing students for meaningful careers in an industry that underpins every community in our state.

“As Texas leads the nation in growth, it is programs like CIM that ensure we have the workforce ready to build what comes next,” he adds.

For more information on the CIM program, visit concretedegree.com.

Related: TACA names vice president of government affairs

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