Bond will help with renovations
Christine Carrillo and Deirdre Newman
Voters overwhelmingly agreed to lend the Coast Community College
District a hand with renovations by passing the $370-million bond
with 65% of the vote on Nov. 5.
The bond will fund facility improvements over 20 years at all
three schools -- Orange Coast, Golden West and Coastline.
OCC will receive the largest portion of the bond -- $200 million.
The rest of the district will receive $8.6 million for other
improvements, such as replacing temporary district buildings with
permanent structures.
“We’re grateful that the voters in our Coast Community College
District felt that the colleges were deserving of the support to redo
and renovate the infrastructure of the three institutions,” said
Kenneth Yglesias, president of Golden West College, which received
about $96 million. “Obviously, an institution like this could use a
lot more, but we’re grateful to receive anything we can.”
Coastline, the third college in the district, will get about $66.2
million.
While the renovations on each of the campuses may be extensive and
are due to begin very soon, their completion lies years ahead.
“What this will do is basically renovate the infrastructure,”
Yglesias said. “In a 122-acre institution, it’s a big job. I think
within the next four to six months there will be some projects that
will start.”
Having been given the chance to begin the renovation process,
community college officials are excited about what the new
renovations will mean for their schools.
“I thought, doggone it, I was just glad I was here at OCC during
the time it passed because it will have such an incredible impact on
the future of the place,” said Gene Farrell, interim president of
OCC. “I would have hated to miss it.”
Orange Coast College also scored in the election with the passage
of Proposition 47, the state public facilities bond act, which got
59% of the vote. Proposition 47 bonds will fund the vast majority of
the school’s new library, Ferrell said. Money from the college
district’s bond will fund the rest.
“This is a fantastic recognition of both the need and the future
possibilities for educational infrastructure in Orange County,”
district board President Walt Howald said.
“This is really a terrific investment by all of us to make sure
that our children, grandchildren and people who want to change jobs
and all kinds of things will now have the physical opportunities,” he
said.
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