Organization
Board of Trustees
Gloristine Brown, Vice Chair - Bethel, NC |
Steve M. Lassiter, Jr. - Greenville, NC |
Charles Ellis, Secretary - Greenville, NC |
Don Mills - Greenville, NC |
Gary Evans, Chair - Ayden, NC |
Patti-Sanders-Smith - Greenville, NC |
Brian Floyd - Greenville, NC |
Tyree Walker - Greenville, NC |
Kathy P. Frazier - Ayden, NC |
Randy Walters - Farmville, NC |
Dr. Peter J. Kragel - Greenville, NC |
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Honorary Trustees (Ex-Officio)
Phillip R. Dixon
Kay V. Whichard
Dr. G. Dennis Massey, President Emeritus
SGA President (Ex-Officio)
Mitchell Jeri
Pitt County Board of Commissioners
Alex Albright |
Christopher W. Nunnally |
Tom Coulson |
Mary Perkins-Williams |
Mike Fitzpatrick, Vice-Chair |
Beth B. Ward |
Ann Floyd Huggins, Chair |
Lauren White |
Melvin C. McLawhorn |
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Pitt Community College Foundation
The Pitt Community College Foundation, Inc. receives gifts and secure external resources for the college. Individuals wishing to contribute to the Foundation may contact Georgia (Beth) Sigmon, Executive Director, at (252) 493-7834 or e-mail at gsigmon@email.pittcc.edu. Gifts/donations may be mailed to PCC Foundation, P. O. Drawer 7007, Greenville, NC 27835-7007 or on-line at www.pittccfoundation.com. Members of the Foundation Board are:
Edna Barber - Winterville, NC |
Bill Brown - Greenville, NC |
Don Brown - Ayden, NC |
Ricky Brown, Treasurer - Greenville, NC |
John Carrere - Greenville, NC |
Randy Collier, Chair - Greenville, NC |
Jennifer Congleton - Winterville, NC |
Marianne Cox, VP of Institutional Advancement - Winterville, NC |
Sylvia Craft - Farmville, NC |
Gary Evans, Board of Trustees Chair - Ayden, NC |
John Evans - Greenville, NC |
Dr. Peter Kragel, Board of Trustees Rep. - Greenville, NC |
David Laney - Greenville, NC |
Betty Langston - Winterville, NC |
Melvin McLawhorn - Greenville, NC |
Don Mills - Greenville, NC |
Miles Minges, Immediate Past - Greenville, NC |
Simone Pate, Secretary - Greenville, NC |
W. Lee Percise, III - Greenville, NC |
Lori Preast - Greenville, NC |
Donald Rhodes, Vice-Chair - Farmville, NC |
Kenneth Ross - Ayden, NC |
Dr. Lawrence Rouse, President PCC - Greenville, NC |
Beth Sigmon, Executive Director - Winterville, NC |
Thomas Stroud - Greenville, NC |
Jonathan Taft - Greenville, NC |
Dan Taylor - Greenville, NC |
Randy Walters - Farmville, NC |
Diane Waters- Winterville, NC |
Rachel Whitten - Greenville, NC |
Brian Wing - Greenville, NC |
Brooke Worthington - Greenville, NC |
History of the College
Pitt Community College was chartered by the State Board of Education in March 1961 and began operation as Pitt Industrial Education Center that year with Dr. Lloyd Spaulding serving as director.
As program offerings developed, the school grew to become Pitt Technical Institute (PTI) in July 1964. The brand new Vernon E. White Building opened two months later to serve 96 students in nine curricula.
Dr. William E. Fulford served as president from 1964 to 1984, and the institution developed considerably under his leadership.
The Robert Lee Humber Building was completed in 1970, followed five years later by a new addition to Vernon White. The addition provided space for a student lounge with various recreational facilities and Business Computer Programming courses. The White Building now serves as the college’s administrative center.
Two noteworthy events occurred in the summer of 1979: The Kay V. Whichard Building was completed, providing space for classrooms and shop facilities, and the N.C. General Assembly passed legislation, changing PTI to Pitt Community College. The new name came with the addition of two-year University Transfer programs.
Dr. Charles E. Russell, a Jamesville native, was named PCC’s third president in 1984. He served until 2003, helping PCC became one of the state’s largest community colleges.
With Russell at the helm, the college added 32 curriculum degree programs and led the charge for three major bond referenda. In 1991, he encouraged college trustees to spend $2 million in bond revenue to purchase 105 acres from H.L. Bowen’s heirs, thus providing a foundation for much of the college’s future growth.
Seven buildings were added to the PCC main campus during Russell’s tenure:
Clifton W. Everett Building - Opened in 1987 to provide a home for the college’s Learning Resource Center. It was completely renovated between March 2018 and February 2020.
A.B. Whitley Building - A vocational education classroom and lab/shop facility, it opened in February 1990.
William E. Fulford Building - Opened in January 1993, it provides instructional/office space for allied health curricula.
Welding/Masonry Building - The building, which includes the John Roberts Welding Lab, opened in April 1993.
Henry Leslie Building - Opened in November 1996, it provides space for the college’s Transitional Studies Department.
Edward and Joan Warren Building - Opened in January 2000, the building houses the Charles Coburn Center, which is home to the college’s women’s volleyball and men’s basketball teams. It also hosts offices and classrooms for placement testing, PCC Athletics, TRiO and intramural sports.
Raymond Reddrick Building - Completed in the spring of 2004, the building includes classrooms, offices, computer labs and the PCC Student Success Center.
In the fall of 1997, PCC and the entire 58-member N.C. Community College System converted from a quarter system to a semester system.
Dr. G. Dennis Massey was selected as Pitt’s fourth president in 2003. He began Aug. 1, bringing with him more than 34 years of experience in higher education, including service as interim president of McHenry Community College in Illinois.
PCC experienced considerable growth with Massey as president.
In 2005, PCC Trustees agreed to purchase the 131-acre Davenport property adjacent to Pitt’s main campus and approved a Facilities Master Plan outlining future campus growth.
The following year, the college opened a Public Safety Training Center near Bethel that features pistol and rifle ranges. It also re-opened the Humber Building after an extensive renovation project brought the facility in line with modern building, energy, and handicap accessibility codes.
To alleviate congestion on the main campus during Humber’s renovation, PCC purchased the former MacThrift office building on Memorial Drive in Greenville. The facility eventually became the PCC Greenville Center to house continuing education programming, including the PCC Small Business Center.
Minges-Overton Baseball Complex received a facelift in 2006-07 that included the additions of state-of-the-art lighting and Lewis Field House. Fencing to secure the ballpark site was added in 2019.
The 2009 Spring Semester featured the opening of the Craig F. Goess Student Center, which serves as a one-stop shop for student services, including counseling, financial aid and admissions. It features the J. Paul and Diana S. Davenport Multipurpose Room, Walter & Marie Williams Dining Room, and Bulldog Cafe.
PCC opened the Herman Simon Building, a major addition to the Fulford Building, in 2010. The facility provides space for health sciences programming. To help pay for its construction, the PCC Foundation launched the college’s first-ever capital campaign in February 2008 and raised more than $7 million in 14 months.
A number of capital improvement projects began in 2010, starting with the Construction and Industrial Technology (CIT) Building and Facilities Services Complex. Administrators cut the ribbon on both in May 2012, adding more than 90,000 square feet of instructional space, offices and storage areas to the west side of campus. The $10.2 million needed for construction came through a quarter-cent local sales tax Pitt County voters approved in 2007.
The CIT Building, which is named for PCC alumnus and local businessman Craig M. Goess, is home to Automotive Systems Technology and Building Construction Technology. It features classrooms and state-of-the-art labs and work bays.
The Facilities Services Complex provides space for maintenance, grounds, purchasing and courier services and features offices, a conference room, warehouses, mail room and carpentry shop.
Later in 2012, PCC dedicated the Charles E. Russell Building, which features 24 general purpose classrooms and computer labs, 26 offices for faculty and staff, study areas, a pair of conference rooms and a secondary campus data facility. It cost $9.3 million to build, with funding coming from the quarter-cent local sales tax.
Despite the addition of new facilities, PCC remained North Carolina’s most-crowded community college. With that in mind, PCC administrators embarked upon an awareness campaign in 2013 to explain to the community the need for passage of a $19.9 million-bond referendum in order to provide more instructional space on campus. The efforts paid off in November 2013, when a majority of Pitt County voters supported the bond funding by a 10,735-6,479 margin (62.4 percent).
While bond funding was being raised, two new additions joined the PCC landscape in 2015. The 35-foot Ed and Joan Warren Clock Tower, a gift to the PCC Foundation from the Warren Estate, was raised into place in February, and a new $3.58 million-addition to the Goess Student Center opened in April, providing space for the college bookstore and a variety of services, including a career center, student lounge, offices, conference rooms, and 45-station computer lab.
When bond funding became available, PCC used roughly $2 million to purchase, renovate and equip a building closer to main campus for law enforcement training. A ribbon-cutting took place in December 2016.
The remaining bond money (approximately $18 million) was combined with a $2 million-U.S. Economic Development Administration grant to build the Walter and Marie Williams Building. The 78,000-square-foot structure opened in 2017 and is home to science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) programming.
Following Massey’s retirement in the summer of 2018, PCC welcomed Dr. Lawrence L. Rouse as its fifth-ever president. A South Carolina native, Rouse brought more than 36 years of experience in community college administration to PCC. He joined Pitt from James Sprunt Community College, where he served as president and CEO for 13 years.
Shortly after Rouse began, PCC and Pitt County Schools administrators cut the ribbon on a new home for the Pitt County Schools Early College High School on PCC’s main campus. The 13,000-square-foot building features eight classrooms and a multipurpose room.
In November, college administrators cut the ribbon on newly-renovated health sciences facilities in the Fulford and Simon buildings, which included a 10-bed simulation hospital, hot lab, and classrooms and laboratories for several programs.
At the start of 2019, PCC announced a three-year partnership with the prestigious Achieving the Dream National Network. Rouse calls it a “paradigm shift” for Pitt in its effort to increase educational equity and ensure students - particularly low-income students and students of color - achieve their goals for academic success, personal growth and economic opportunity.
Throughout 2019, the PCC Foundation engaged in a campaign to raise funding for VISIONS, after receiving an offer of up to $2 million from the Eddie & Jo Allison Smith Family Foundation. In January 2020, the PCC Foundation announced it had surpassed its $1 million-goal to fully match the Smith Family Foundation’s pledge.
In March 2020, PCC closed campus to the public due to the coronavirus pandemic. The college’s response also included shifting courses from the traditional classroom setting to the internet mid-semester and having employees begin teleworking.
After putting together a virtual graduation ceremony for the Class of 2020 in June, PCC administrators announced in July that most classes would continue to be taught online in the fall due to the ongoing pandemic.
As PCC students and employees begin returning to campus in the fall of 2021, the college continues to award associate degrees, diplomas and certificates in more than 60 programs of study and provides adult basic education, literacy training and occupational extension courses. The college serves more than 23,000 credit and non-credit students annually and is the sixth-largest in the 58-member N.C. Community College System in terms of student credit hours.
Locations
PCC’s main campus is located on Highway 11 South, between Greenville and Winterville. Its physical address is 1986 Pitt Tech Road, Winterville, NC 28590. The mailing address is P. O. Drawer 7007, Greenville, NC 27835-7007. The shipping address is 2064 Warren Drive, Winterville, NC 28590. The web address is www.pittcc.edu.
Farmville Center’s physical address is 3781 S. Main Street, Farmville, NC.
Greenville Center’s physical address is 3107 S. Memorial Drive, Greenville, NC
Performance Measures
2021 Performance Measures Summary Report
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System Goal |
System Baseline |
College Averages |
Pitt CC Score |
A. Basic Skills Student Progress |
42.5% |
15.7% |
33.5% |
45.6% |
B. Student Success Rate in College Level English Courses |
70.4% |
47.1% |
62.6% |
54.6% |
C. Student Success Rate in College Level Math Courses |
54.5% |
29.9% |
46.3% |
37.0% |
D. Year One Progress |
71.8% |
56.8% |
66.8% |
64.0% |
E. Curriculum Completion |
61.3% |
43.1% |
55.3% |
50.0% |
F. Licensure & Pass Rate Index |
1.09% |
0.75% |
0.98% |
0.98% |
G. Transfer Performance |
91.1% |
79.4% |
87.2% |
87.7% |
Based on NCCCS Data Office of Research and Performance Management
Pitt Community College 2021 Performance Measures Scores (most recent available)
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