Colleges counting on bond
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Deirdre Newman
The goal for officials with the Coast Community College District
during the next few months can be narrowed to a single number: 55.
That number represents the majority vote they need from residents
living within their district to pass a $370-million bond to fund a
host of facility improvements at the three district campuses.
District officials say the bond is necessary to modernize the
library at Golden West College, to renovate the auditorium in the
Moore Theater at Orange Coast College and to construct a permanent
building for Westminster Learning Center at Coastline Community
College.
“I see the need at the ground level,” said Peter Green -- who has
been teaching at Golden West for more than three decades -- at the
July meeting. “The air conditioning and heat are antiquated, it’s
extremely energy inefficient. I would like to see the district look
as good as it did when I came 30 years ago.”
Mary Boticella, chief executive officer of Huntington Beach
Hospital, said the bond could be a huge boon for the nursing program
at Golden West.
“The nursing profession and hospitals are critically in need of an
increasing number of trained nurses like those trained by community
colleges,” Boticella said at the July meeting. “[The bond] would
provide new and improved buildings and improve the number of nurse
trainees by 50-80% at Golden West.”
If the bond passes, Orange Coast College would receive
approximately $199 million; Golden West College would get about $95
million; Coastline Community College would take in about $66 million;
and the district would receive approximately $9 million for replacing
temporary buildings on all three campuses.
Just how big that “if” is remains to be seen.
The board of trustees approved placing the bond on the November
ballot on July 31, and while it already has considerable support in
the community, the next few months are critical to garner the needed
55% majority vote.
The district is now in the process of putting together an
independent campaign committee that will further educate the
community on exactly what the bond will be used for.
Money from voters
Only voters who live within the district’s boundary area -- which
includes Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Fountain
Valley, Westminster and portions of Garden Grove -- will be voting on
the bond. If it passes, they will pay approximately $16.76 more
annually per $100,000 assessed home valuation until the bond is paid
off. While that depends on how quickly the assessed valuation grows
in the boundary area, a conservative estimate is 2044, said Erin
Cohn, the district’s spokeswoman.
About 60% of the district’s students live within the boundary
area, Cohn said.
District officials said they worked with faculty, the classified
staff and students to identify a bare bones, fiscally responsible
list of needed repairs.
In addition to the bond, the district is also hoping to receive
approximately $2 million from a massive statewide bond if it passes
in November. These funds would be used for the plans and working
drawings for campuswide repairs at Golden West College and a new
Orange Coast College library.
Officials have also been able to identify an additional guaranteed
$100 million from other funding sources over the next 10 to 15 years,
since the total improvement price tag is $470 million.
In March, officials floated the bond concept to the community in a
preliminary survey. Over the past few months, staff and consultants
have been busy crunching numbers and making further contact with the
community to continue gauging its level of support.
Although the exact amount of the bond was not disclosed to the
community during the surveys, the response has been extremely
favorable, said Chancellor William Vega in July.
“With few exceptions, the community members agree -- improving
facilities is a priority,” Vega said.
Strong support, so far
A tremendous degree of support for the bond was evident during the
July meeting.
Many residents articulated their belief that the three district
colleges present the only feasible alternative for many students who
might not otherwise attend college.
“The community college system is the most cost-effective way for
the have-nots to get an education and get out of the ghetto of
ignorance,” said Ralph Bauer, a Huntington Beach City Council member.
Simon Tsung, president of the Asian Business Coalition, said the
colleges are instrumental in educating Asian students from middle
class families overseas.
“It’s something they don’t have,” Tsung said. “Let’s continue the
momentum in America. It doesn’t just help the community, it helps our
future.”
If the passage of a major facilities improvement program in the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District is any indication, the success
of a bond depends on community involvement.
Newport-Mesa started the assessment process for its comprehensive
facilities improvement program, known as Measure A, about two years
before trustees approved putting the bond to the voters, said Mike
Fine, former assistant superintendent. It also created an advisory
committee more than a year in advance of the vote that included
community participation.
“Our community bought into the fact that the needs that were
identified were in fact real needs,” Fine said. “They were, if you
will, meat and potatoes. There was nothing thrown in there.”
The $110-million bond passed two years ago with 72.1% of the vote.
Although the community college district does not have the luxury
of so much time, it can still accomplish the same ends by selling a
“complete, thorough and thoughtful” bond plan, Fine said.
Even with all the advance planning, there were still many in the
district who weren’t sure that the bond would pass.
“In [the Newport-Mesa] community ... you can’t take anything for
granted,” Fine said. “You have to be prepared to address
[everything.]”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN is a reporter for Times Community News. She may
be reached at (949) 574-4221 or by e-mail at
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