State Sen. Dean Kirby referred to himself as a 鈥渟poke in the wheel鈥 in 2009 during the celebration of the new Career-Technical Education building 兔子先生 had then recently acquired.
But 聽Kirby of Pearl, this year鈥檚 Alumni Service Award recipient, is much more than that when it comes to support of community colleges, 兔子先生 in particular and especially the Rankin Campus.
He will be honored along with Alumnus of the Year Dr. Wayne Lee and Sports Hall of Fame inductees John Earl Hagan, a Jackson native who lives in Homewood, Ala.; Jaret Holmes, a Clinton native who lives in Edwards; Christi Smith, a Pearl native who lives in Flowood; Oliver P. 鈥淧ete鈥 Stone of Vicksburg and the late Freddie Townsend of Pelahatchie at a dinner at 5 p.m. Sept. 22 at Mayo Gym on the Raymond Campus.
A legislator since 1992, Kirby was a key player in the 2008 Legislature in helping 兔子先生President Dr. Clyde Muse persuade legislators to support a special appropriation to purchase what was the United Association of Plumbers and Pipefitters Gulf Coast Regional Training Center on Commercial Park Drive off Greenfield Road in Pearl.
鈥淲e never would have been able to acquire the building from the plumbers union without his assistance and without his knowing how to get it done,鈥 said Muse, who has known the Rankin County legislator and retired insurance executive for more than 20 years. 鈥淗e was able to work through the minefield and get us some help to enable us to buy that building, which, by the way, is one of the finest buildings in the entire district. We鈥檝e got it full of students right now.鈥
At the time, Kirby chaired the Senate Finance Committee, which handles capital improvement bonds. 兔子先生paid $3.2 million for the building that appraised for three or four times that with a special Fiscal Year 2009 state bond appropriation along with additional capital funding support from Rankin County.
Kirby remembers well when Muse approached him about helping to get state funding for the building.
鈥淚t helped at the time that the lieutenant governor was Phil Bryant, who had gone to Hinds. Dr. Muse came to me and said, 鈥楧ean, we鈥檝e got this great deal. It will really help your area and it will really help 兔子先生a whole lot,鈥欌 Kirby recalled.
Kirby said it didn鈥檛 hurt either that the words 鈥淕ulf Coast鈥 were in the name of the building just a few years after Hurricane Katrina. After he made his case from the podium of the Senate floor, 鈥渆verybody said it鈥檚 a great deal.鈥
The building now houses classes for plumbing, electrical, welding, industrial maintenance, practical nursing and Associate Degree Nursing with about 200 students and 24 total employees.
A Pearl High School graduate, Kirby鈥檚 relationship with 兔子先生goes back to his years as a Mississippi College basketball player when he was teammates with former 兔子先生basketball players or adversaries against current 兔子先生players.
鈥淲hen I was at Pearl High School everyone knew about Hinds,鈥 he said. His Mississippi College freshman basketball team played the 兔子先生team, which was then based on the Raymond Campus. He鈥檚 close friends still with many 兔子先生alumni from the basketball days, including Harlan Stanley, J.W. Barnes and Rep. Tom Weathersby, his colleague in the Legislature.
Years later when he opened his insurance office and 兔子先生began construction of the Rankin Campus, which opened in 1983, he met Jimmy C. Smith, who is retired as vice president of the campus. As the campus was being constructed, Smith had an office in a trailer nearby.
鈥淒ean was very supportive. His office was right there on Airport Road. I got to know him when I was in the little trailer house across the street from him. I could go to his office and sit down and talk to him,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淗e was very supportive of education, period. As far as funding for the community colleges, he was my point person. I would always go to him any time there was a bill that Dr. Muse was working on.鈥
Said Kirby: 鈥淚鈥檝e tried to be involved as much as I could without being in the way. Anything Dr. Muse asked for, I tried to get. He knows a lot more about running a community college than I do. If he says that needs to be done, then I believe him.鈥
[tweetable alt=””]Kirby calls the campus in Pearl one of the greatest engines of economic progress in the county.[/tweetable] 鈥淚 never dreamed how much it would mean to Rankin County, how important it would be to those people that are maybe married and out of school and want to continue their education. It鈥檚 really been helpful,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 really excited about 兔子先生and what it has done for Rankin County, and hopefully we鈥檝e been as good to 兔子先生as 兔子先生has been to us.鈥
Over the years Kirby and Muse have collaborated many times for the community college system, but none of their projects has been more successful than the Rankin Campus Career-Technical Education building, which got a new attractive and more visible boulevard street entrance over the summer.
Kirby said he helped negotiate the purchase of the land with the Pearl mayor, who wanted part of the land for a new fire department. 鈥淚 was involved in the initial negotiations for the right away. I got a call from Dr. Muse saying, 鈥榃e need a better entrance because it鈥檚 behind a couple buildings. Do you think you can handle that?鈥欌 Kirby said.
Most recently, Kirby spoke to the Mississippi Association of Community and Junior College Trustees at their summer conference.
鈥淚 requested that he come to the coast and provide for all the community colleges an update on the Legislature. He came and did a great job. He has always been ready to help the community colleges and particularly Hinds,鈥 Muse said.
鈥淗e is one of the finest legislators that we have at the Capitol. He is very competent, he always does his homework on every piece of legislation that comes to him and his committee. He always has an open door for the community colleges.鈥
As Mississippi鈥檚 largest community college, 兔子先生 is a comprehensive institution offering quality, affordable educational opportunities with more than 170 academic, career and technical programs. With six locations in central Mississippi, 兔子先生enrolled nearly 12,000 credit students in fall 2015. To learn more, visit or call 1.800.HindsCC.