College district may pursue $344-million bond
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Deirdre Newman
The Coast Community College District may ask voters for about $344
million in November.
Such an amount of money is needed to improve facilities, including at
Golden West College, over the next 20 years, said Erin Cohn, public
affairs director for the district.
Over four days in early March, the district surveyed about 700 likely
voters about their feelings toward a $344-million bond, Cohn said.
On Wednesday, district trustees will receive the survey results and
decide whether to pursue the bond.
If placed on the November ballot, the bond will more than likely
compete for attention with a massive statewide bond of $13 billion for
facility improvements for campuses from the elementary to community
college level. The governor has expressed interest in the bond but has
not signed it yet, Cohn said.
“We don’t know how that would play, politically speaking,” Cohn said.
“We don’t know if that would help or hurt us. It’s a crapshoot right
now.”
While the district would receive about $1 million of the statewide
bond, it would not be enough for the comprehensive undertaking it is
contemplating.
Lately, county voters have been generous in approving bonds -- all
seven of the school-related bonds on the March ballot passed for a total
of $718.34 million. In June 2000, the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District passed a $110-million school facilities improvement bond.
Bonds have a higher chance of passing since the approval threshold was
dropped to 55% of voters, said Reed Royalty, president of the Orange
County Taxpayers Assn.
Some of the Coast Community College District’s survey questions
included what voters felt were the biggest problems facing the community
colleges in their area; if they thought local community colleges had a
need for funding and, if so, how great they perceived that funding to be.
It also asked respondents if an election were held today, would they
support a $344-million bond measure for the district for facilities
improvements?The upgrades would be based on the facilities master plan
for the three colleges in the district, including Golden West. Some of
the district’s buildings are more than 50 years old.
To get the bond on the November ballot, the trustees must make a final
decision by August, Cohn said.
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