Search
Close this search box.

OCC names business-degree learning space in honor of retiring school president

ONONDAGA, N.Y. — Onondaga Community College (OCC) has renamed the primary classroom associated with the school’s business degree programs “Crabill Commons” in honor of retiring school president Casey Crabill.

The board of trustees at Onondaga Community College on Tuesday approved the classroom naming.

In addition to the name change, Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) donated $100,000 to the OCC Foundation. The funding will benefit student scholarships, programs, and projects that “create partnerships in success for students and the entire community,” OCC said.

“As a graduate of Onondaga Community College, I know first-hand the value of an OCC degree and how it impacted my career,” said Mark Tryniski, a 1981 OCC graduate and member of the college’s board of trustees and president and CEO of DeWitt–based Community Bank. “OCC is one of this community’s greatest treasures and Dr. Crabill did a remarkable job leading the institution throughout her nine years as president. Putting her name on one of the college’s showcase learning environments, which was transformed during her tenure, is a fitting tribute to her and all she accomplished.”

The learning space formerly known as “Whitney Commons” was opened on the 2nd floor of the Whitney Applied Technology Center in the fall of 2015. It includes a scrolling illuminated stock ticker, large touch screens and monitors in the active collaboration area where students work as problem-solving teams, a backlit map of the world to show visual learners how transactions on one side of the world ripple across the globe, and clocks showing current times in business centers around the world.

Thursday was Crabill’s final day as OCC president after nine years as the school’s top official. Warren Hilton, the college’s new president, takes office Friday.

 

 

 

 

 

Post
Share
Tweet
Print
Email

Get our email updates

Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.

Advertisement
Advertisement