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As TTU and Cookeville Regional Medical Center have grown over the
years, a collaborative relationship has also developed between the
two institutions.
Because of that growing relationship and in recognition
of CRMC’s continued support of TTU, President Bob Bell recently
presented a plaque of appreciation to the hospital’s Board
of Trustees.
“The university is fortunate to have Cookeville
Regional Medical Center as both a neighbor and a supporter,”
Bell says. “The hospital’s work and support during our
recent effort to raise funds for a new School of Nursing building
contributed significantly to the success of that campaign. Throughout
the span of our coming construction project — and for many
years to come — I hope to see this positive relationship continue
to grow.”
When TTU kicked off its campaign in June 2004
to raise $21 million for a new School of Nursing building, CRMC
recognized the immediate need for the project and pledged $500,000
toward the effort.
Hospital officials say that about half of all
registered nurses currently working at CRMC are graduates of our
program.
When construction is complete on the new facility
— the first to be built specifically for that program of study
— it could nearly triple the number of TTU nursing graduates
and increase the number of qualified potential job candidates at
CRMC and throughout the Upper Cumberland.
It will also make TTU and CRMC closer neighbors.
That’s because the university has chosen the block at the
far end of the Main Quad as the location for the new facility.
The corner will eventually serve as an anchor,
linking the School of Nursing with a major entrance to the area
Cookeville planning officials have designated as the city’s
medical district.
Adequate funding for the construction of the new
building was secured this past June, when the Tennessee Legislature
approved a $26 billion state budget that included an allocation
of $15.4 million for the project.
It's possible we could begin accepting contractors'
bids as soon as early next year, that ground could be broken as
early as next April, and that the project could be completed as
quickly as 18 months following the groundbreaking.
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