Neilsen
黑料官网 will honor Ray Neilsen, the 2014 Alumni Service Award winner, at the Alumni Dinner, held at 5 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 23 in Mayo Gymnasium on the Raymond Campus.
Neilsen believes in second chances. His second chance came at the College of Idaho where history professor Howard Berger saw potential, while others saw a brash kid from a middle-upper class family who was passed from grade to grade, more trouble than untapped potential.
The relationship got off to a rocky start when Berger challenged Neilsen鈥檚 ability to read. He recalls the 鈥渉orrible鈥 experience of being asked to read aloud and struggling to string the words together. After taking a written entrance exam, Berger told Neilsen, 鈥淩ay, your writing skills stink.鈥
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know how bad I was until I met someone who cared about me and my success,鈥 Neilsen says. 鈥淗e opened my eyes to the value of education and learning.鈥
It was just the second chance he needed. With Berger鈥檚 help 鈥 and a lot of hard work and dedication 鈥 Neilsen committed himself to his education, earning bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees. Over a 20-year period, Neilsen earned his way up the ladder, from busser to chairman of Ameristar Casinos with eight locations in six states and more than 7,000 employees.
Neilsen began his relationship with Hinds in 2006 when his passion for learning surfaced in an onsite GED preparation program at Ameristar Casino in Vicksburg. As general manager he recognized that many Ameristar team members missed opportunities to grow with the company because they lacked a high school diploma. Their second chance came with a boss who gave them a pathway to personal fulfillment and $1,000 when they passed the GED test.
His father, Craig H. Neilsen, was the founder of Ameristar Casino. 鈥淗e was proud of the GED program we established at Ameristar Vicksburg,鈥 Ray Neilsen says. Wanting to make a bigger impact in his adopted community of Vicksburg, Neilsen called upon the resources of the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation, which was established by his father in 2002 to support spinal cord injury (SCI) research and rehabilitation. Ten percent of the foundation鈥檚 resources go to other entities helping to improve lives.
Craig Neilsen, who became quadriplegic after a 1985 car accident, rarely spoke about his injury, but once said, 鈥溾 think that most people 鈥 when push comes to shove 鈥 take their hard knocks and then pick up the pieces and go on.鈥
Perhaps prophetically, the Neilsen Foundation is doing just that 鈥 helping Adult Education students pick up the sometimes messy pieces of their lives and go on to better things. With Ray Neilsen鈥檚 urging, the Neilsen Foundation made a $50,000 gift in 2009 to establish the Education Pays program, which awarded $500 checks to Warren County GED achievers enrolled in the college鈥檚 Adult Education program.
From that initial investment, the foundation has awarded more than $600,000 to support the ABE/GED program at the Vicksburg-Warren Campus and the Jackson Campus-Academic/Technical Center. From a computer lab staffed by tutors to instructional dollars to provide more class time for adult learners, the Neilsen Foundation has been the college鈥檚 partner in improving outcomes in Adult Education. This year Neilsen Foundation funds support a Single Stop office at the Vicksburg-Warren Campus and a basic computer applications course designed specifically for adult learners who must now take a computer-based GED test.
Most recently, the Neilsen Foundation is funding scholarships and supplemental support for two Hinds students with spinal cord injuries. After his father鈥檚 death in 2006, Ray Neilsen was named cotrustee and chairman of the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation.
鈥淎fter several years of therapy, my dad only had limited use of a few of his fingers, nothing else,鈥 Neilsen explains. 鈥淭he accident only slowed him down for a little while, and over time, his focus and attention became more laser-like and intense.鈥
Those same words might be used to describe Ray Neilsen, says Colleen Hartfield, vice president for Community Relations and Governmental Affairs at Hinds. 鈥淲hen Ray makes a decision to be personally involved in a project or a cause, he鈥檚 all-in. He expects that same commitment from others.鈥
She credits the Neilsen Foundation for being a catalyst for positive changes in the Adult Education program. 鈥淩ay doesn鈥檛 just write a check; he brings resources and connections gained over a successful career to the college. Most of all, he brings a genuine concern, coupled with an incredible drive to make a difference,鈥 Hartfield says, adding with a laugh. 鈥淚t can be exhausting trying to keep up with his mind.鈥
Neilsen says, 鈥淭here鈥檚 this crazed energy, under the surface. It鈥檚 doesn鈥檛 make my life easy, but I can鈥檛 imagine doing it any other way.鈥
Today, Neilsen and his wife Nancy, a Vicksburg native, live in Edwards on a meticulously landscaped ranch, where visitors will find a rock garden. Etched into the rocks are words that describe his personal brand, and nestled among words such as 鈥渋ntegrity,鈥 鈥渃ourage鈥 and 鈥渇amily,鈥 are rocks inscribed with 鈥満诹瞎偻 and 鈥淕ED.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 a place of honor,鈥 Hartfield says. 鈥淚 am so pleased that the college is responding, in kind, and recognizing Ray with the very well-deserved Alumni Service Award.鈥
Neilsen says he is honored and pleased to accept on behalf of the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation and the Adult Education students at 黑料官网.
鈥淚 believe the American dream is still alive,鈥 he says. 鈥淗owever, I tell students in the program that to succeed, an education is paramount. I tell them that education gives you hope that your life can be better. I teach them what my Dad taught me鈥攕uccess must be earned, and you must do what you do better than anybody else. That鈥檚 the difference the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation and Hinds CC are making in the lives of Adult Education students and in our community. It is my intention that our partnership will continue for many years to come.鈥