Funds for these scholarships were provided by seven community partners who have created a $1.1 million dollar endowment

The Yavapai Community College Foundation has awarded twelve two-year full tuition scholarships to students in the College’s healthcare program. Ten of the scholarships went to nursing students and two of the scholarships were awarded to radiologic technology students.
According to the Foundation, this brings the total number of healthcare scholarships awarded over the years to 135. In this program, there is a student completion rate of 92% and a 100% student pass rate on licensing examinations.
Ninety percent of the students in the healthcare program remain in the immediate area to practice in their chosen health care field.
The endowment for these scholarships, which was established in 2012, has to date raised $1.1 million in donations from the Community College’s seven community partners: The Jewish Community Foundation; YRMC; Margaret T. Morris Foundation; the Harold James Family Trust; Prescott Radiology Group; and the Fain Signature Group.
Forty-eight future nurses gathered December 13 for a traditional graduation pinning ceremony at the Yavapai Community College Performing Arts Center on the Prescott campus. (Blog was informed that at least 13 are from the Verde Valley.) The nursing graduates also celebrated with a lamp lighting and recitation of the Florence Nightingale pledge. In the pledge, the graduates commit to “be loyal to my work and devoted towards the welfare of those committed to my care.”
Who has decided to sleep on the new exam room beds at Yavapai Community College’s Prescott Valley Allied Health facility after hours? No one has the answer.
Verde Executive Dean James Perey told the Yavapai College Advisory Committee to the Governing Board that “we still have a two-year nursing program” in the Verde Valley. Perey said that there are “no immediate plans to remove it at this time.” He also indicated in response to a question from the Chair of the Committee that the entire two-years of training could be completed in the Verde Valley.