Some Pittsburgh universities propose credit cut to tackle nursing shortage
News
June 13, 2026

Some Pittsburgh universities propose credit cut to tackle nursing shortage

By MEGAN TROTTER
TribLive

Some Pittsburgh-area universities are encouraging the state to consider lowering the number of credits required for select bachelor’s degree programs as a solution to healthcare workforce shortages.

The proposal was discussed Thursday during a Senate Labor and Industry Committee roundtable at Carlow University, where university presidents, hospital leaders and lawmakers explored ways to address growing workforce shortages in healthcare.

State Sen. Devlin Robinson, R-Bridgeville, who chairs the committee, organized the meeting to examine staffing challenges facing private universities and healthcare providers and identify strategies to strengthen the pathway from higher education into healthcare careers.

The conversation comes as state Sen. Lynda Schlegel Culver, R-Northumberland, prepares legislation that would allow Pennsylvania colleges and universities to offer three-year bachelor’s degree programs. The bill has not yet been formally introduced.

A 2025 Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania survey found that state hospitals reported 14% of nursing positions were unfilled, leaving existing nurses stretched thin and working longer hours. The survey also projected the state faces a shortage of 20,000 nurses.

Local hospitals stressed how much the shortages were being felt on Thursday.

Ken Mittra, Independence Health System chief human resources officer, said the health system has 646 job openings, including about 200 registered nurse positions.

“If you ask me what keeps me up at night— recruitment,” Mittra said. “There’s just not enough folks in the market, in the communities that we serve to fill these openings.”

Mittra said the shortage stems in part from a lack of qualified nurses completing the clinical training and licensing requirements needed to enter the profession.

“At St. Clair, we are seeing similar trends, and I think the most important thing is to understand is that we also want a workforce that wants to stay with us,” said Andrea Kalina, senior vice president of St. Clair Hospital.

Carlow University President Kathy Humphrey said the proposal would give colleges and universities greater flexibility to reduce the time and cost required to earn certain degrees while preserving longer programs that require additional coursework.

She noted that not all bachelor’s degree programs could be completed in three years, but some could be shortened if institutions had the authority to do so.

Under current Pennsylvania law, bachelor’s degrees must include at least 120 credit hours, Humphrey said.

Under the Pennsylvania Code, the state mandates that all bachelor’s degrees — both public and private — require a minimum of 120 semester credit hours. Private universities determine those details internally, provided they meet strict standards set by national institutional accreditors.

Several states officially allow or are developing a 90-credit accelerated programs designed to fast-track students into in-demand careers, including Ohio, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Utah and Hawaii.

After listening quietly through much of the discussion, Chatham University President Lisa Lambert cautioned against reducing higher education to job training alone. She emphasized the importance of coursework that broadens students’ perspectives and strengthens critical-thinking skills beyond the requirements of a specific career.

“I’m sorry, I have to spit in a word here for the value of critical thinking,” Lambert said. “This is why we have things that are not simply training students in a narrow specific field. We have got to include courses that expand their knowledge.”

Duquesne University President David Dausey added that often the college environment is where students begin to mature.

“Ninety percent of what happens in colleges is outside of the classroom, and it’s how you’re learning to interact with other people, and that’s hard to replace,” Dausey said. “It’s something that you can’t substitute.”

State Sen. Nick Pisciottano, D-West Mifflin, said he needed to learn more about the proposal before supporting it.

“My knee-jerk reaction is I would be against watering down the kind of credentials we already have, just because we’re in a tight market,” Pisciottano said.

Mid Mon Valley All Sports Hall of Fame welcomes 6 new members
Latest News, Main
June 20, 2026
Honored Friday night during the Mid Mon Valley All Sports Hall of Fame ceremony at St. Spyridon Hellenic Center in Monessen are, back row from left, Frank Bernadowski, Dion Jansante and Doug Dascenzo,...
West Mifflin School Board addresses projected deficit
Latest News, Main
By SARAH PELLIS spellis@yourmvi.com 
June 20, 2026
The budget proposal for 2026-27 contains a $2.8 million shortfall. After rejecting a proposed tax increase last month in its 2026-27 preliminary budget, West Mifflin Area school board still has decisi...
Slight tax hike included in Ringgold’s 2026-27 budget
Latest News, Main
By TAYLOR BROWN, Senior Reporter 
June 20, 2026
The new spending plan contains a $148K reduction in expenditures from the original document. The Ringgold School Board approved a $63 million budget Wednesday that includes a 0.4 mill property tax inc...
‘Don’t tell your mother:’ A life of love and adventures with my Dad
Features, Opinion
Father's Day Column
June 20, 2026
By TAYLOR BROWN Senior Staff Writer tbrown@yourmvi.com If my mother were still alive, she would probably ask why I thought publishing this column was a good idea. Then she would likely not speak to me...
Washington County Commissioners return funding to county food bank
Latest News, Main
June 20, 2026
It was redirected to the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank during the pandemic. By the MVI Washington County commissioners voted Thursday to return Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture funding ...