By Daniel Perez, El Paso Matters El Paso has done a great job aligning K-12 and higher education to give students the best opportunities to succeed in the workplace, but there is more work to do, the leader of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board said Thursday morning. Wynn Rosser, who took the job as THECB commissioner in January, shared his positive message with more than 100 instructors, education administrators, elected officials and business leaders who gathered at the Starlight Event Center, 6650 Continental Drive, for the second annual Education Matters Summit.

The Council on Regional Economic Expansion and Educational Development, or CREEED, organized the event. The nonprofit, which launched in 2014, works to increase college readiness and completion rates of El Paso-area

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