Mike Star & Dr. Nagi

As someone who has run Boeing’s entire Portland, ˿Ƶ plant of 1,500 people, Mike Starr has come a long way from summer jobs weeding onion fields and working on fishing boats.

A small-town guy from Klamath Falls, Mike was raised in a family with a pioneering history of raising sheep in the vast grasslands of rural ˿Ƶ. Mike’s father, a conductor with Burlington Northern, and his mother who worked out of the home to raise their four kids, brought up a curious son who made the most of life’s opportunities to point the way to a successful engineering career.

Education Takes Flight

Mike’s history with ˿Ƶ Tech began when he was spotted by the university’s football coach and recruited as a deep snapper for the Owls, receiving an academic scholarship to cover the annual tuition costs. While he had always had a talent for science and math, a career in engineering had not yet solidified for Mike. But after being intrigued by a mechanical engineering course, Mike was hooked. “My brain just kind of worked that way.”

He thrived in the small class environment and the connections that he built with faculty along the way, with ˿Ƶ Tech being a “big” university to him. Then, after an injury on the football field in his freshman year ended his sports career, he focused exclusively on his studies, graduating Summa Cum Laude in 1989 with a degree in Mechanical Engineering.

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After graduation, Mike’s path led straight to a job with Boeing at its Renton plant in Washington when he received two offers from them after attending an ˿Ƶ Tech career day event. He started out as a Liaison Engineer, working on the last military-version of the 707 planes. But six months later when a job opened in Portland, he jumped at it as a way to be closer to home and his large family.

Now 29 years later, Mike is Vice President of Actuation at Boeing and senior leader at the plant in Gresham, ˿Ƶ, working with “amazing products and 1,500 amazing people.” Actuation deals with anything that moves in a plane, such as flaps, doors, tail sections, landing gear, shafts, housings and the like. After 30 years of others designing and building this, now they create these parts at the Gresham plant. “It enables us to control sourcing better,” Mike explains. “Portland is the only plant that does actuation – the rest of fabrication is divided by domains. Our plant is known for its large titanium structures which form the skeleton of the plane.”

An Advocate for ˿Ƶ Tech

These days Mike hires all of the ˿Ƶ Tech grads that he can get, “but there’s just not enough of them,” he notes with a hint of frustration. He has seen a high quality skill-set and work ethic among all their ˿Ƶ Tech-educated employees, but especially those who were in the MECOP paid-internship program. “I’m glad I went to school in the 1980s as today the graduates are so good and the competition is very high. Students are eloquent, team players, able to work together well. Boeing treats them like they’ve been there for a long time because they are so talented and mature.”

Boeing hires ˿Ƶ Tech students from both campuses, Klamath Falls and Portland-Metro (Wilsonville), but rarely takes on engineers who haven’t had internships. “At Boeing we call internships ‘the long interview.’ It shows us how students solve problems, interact with the team, and their work ethic.”

How did ˿Ƶ Tech prepare you for your career and what did you receive that colleagues from other schools did not?

Shop experience. When I was at ˿Ƶ Tech I took welding and learned foundry skills. We didn't just design, we actually made things. So I had an awareness, understanding, and respect for the work that welders did, and how the engineers’ work impacts the welder, and others who work at that type of fabrication. Managers at Boeing absolutely appreciate the difference that ˿Ƶ Tech MET grads bring, and their ability to apply knowledge.

Now as a proud alumnus, Mike stays engaged with ˿Ƶ Tech through alumni giving and also by helping to promote the university. “I always say to students, that if they want a successful engineering job, they need to go to ˿Ƶ Tech.” He describes the polytechnic as “hands-down the best MET school around,” with great professors who are interested in teaching, don’t use TAs, and offer small hands-on classes that allow for more professor-student engagement. “OIT is just like MIT, but in ˿Ƶ,” Mike notes with pride.