UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — When the storms roll in, Alex Swithers’ professors know he might be a little late on his assignments.
That’s just a fact of life for the 32-year-old Penn State World Campus student majoring in energy and sustainability policy (ESP) while simultaneously working as a first responder for areas devastated by natural disasters and raising a young family.
Swithers works for TRC Companies, which is a consulting, engineering and construction company focused on a range of areas, including the energy, sustainability, government and transportation sectors. Swithers works on a team that swoops in to assess storm damage and quickly organizes a plan to mitigate it. It’s the kind of job where the work can pile up on a moment’s notice and the timeline to completion is often unknown. A job could last a few days. Or, in the case of the recent Category 4 Hurricane Ida, the job could take weeks.
“I check my NOAA app every day,” said Swithers, with a laugh.
In the initial assessment for Hurricane Ida, Swithers’ team found roughly 26,000 downed power lines — including 2,000 miles of transmission wire — and an offline nuclear power plant that needed power to be functional. His team worked in 16-hour shifts to restore power to the area.
“We love seeing our students excelling in their fields, real-time,” said Haley Sankey, assistant teaching professor in the John A. Dutton e-Education Institute, which administers the ESP program through Penn State World Campus. “Many of our students already work in industry where they’re able to apply their classroom learning immediately.”