Delta College rejects a Lodi campus
by San Joaquin News Service
Sep 11, 2008 | 99 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

San Joaquin Delta College has abandoned plans for a campus

on Victor Road — but there may still be hope for classrooms in Lodi if trustees

reduce the funding for the Mountain House project near Tracy.

That may not be enough, however, to satisfy the people who supported the

school's original plans for a large campus east of Lodi on Victor Road.

"I don't think they lived up to their commitment, I don't think they lived

up to the bond and I don't think they lived up to the voters," said Lodi

City Councilman Larry Hansen. "I'm extremely disappointed about how this

turned out."

At the Delta board meeting Tuesday night, trustees voted 5-0 to abandon the

school's plans for a campus in Lodi off Victor Road.

After spending $4 million on the project, the school had not even purchased

property and it had become apparent that earlier plans would just be too

expensive. The school spent the money on consultants, lawyers, planning work

and property options.

Hansen said Delta's failure to live up to its promises to Lodi can be blamed on

the school's administration and its board, which suffered from lack of

direction and "paralysis by analysis."

In the 2004 election campaign to pass Measure L — and in subsequent years —

Hansen had been a staunch supporter of Delta's plans for Lodi.

"Delta College came to us and told us what they were looking for, and we

worked hard to assist them and they encouraged with their vision," he

said. "I feel like they have really sold us down the river."

 

With the $250 million Measure L bond reduced to around $66

million, the San Joaquin Delta College board of trustees will have to make

tough decisions soon about its remaining plans for Mountain House, Manteca and

Lodi.

Trustee Ted Simas said it will probably comes down to either a fully funded

Mountain House campus at the sacrifice of Lodi and Manteca, or scaled down

versions of all the projects.

"We have not officially abandoned Lodi, but we have officially abandoned

Highway 12," he said, referring to the Victor Road site.

Trustees are expected to make a decision on the future of the satellite

campuses at a meeting in October.

Simas, who represents Manteca, said based on past decisions, he wouldn't be

surprised if the board opts to fund Mountain House with the remainder of the

bond.

"For years, the board majority's 'yes' votes for Mountain House pretty

much rammed Mountain House down our throats," he said. "I would

probably imagine the board majority would go with the higher cost scenario for

Mountain House."

Simas also said the demand for a campus in Lodi may not exist, pointing to a

significant drop in enrollment at Lodi Unified School District this year.

Instead, a smaller building serving about 100 students could really be all that

Lodi needs for the time being.

Lodi Trustee Maria Elena Serna did not attend Tuesday's meeting because she is

recovering from spinal surgery.

Contacted by phone at her home in Lodi, Serna said the residents in Lodi

deserve a campus because of their strong support for Measure L.

"We have to stay with it and find a way," she said. "I have a

couple of ideas that I think may be feasible."

The trustee did not describe her ideas, saying she wanted to discuss them with

college staff first.

Serna also stressed that it's important for people to remember that Delta College

is a community "cornerstone," which offers an education that is even

more valuable at a time of a slow economy.

It was the vision of this higher education coming to Lodi that had so excited

local leaders.

Lodi City Manager Blair King said he doesn't understand how Delta's clearly

defined vision for the city has fallen to the wayside.

"I thought that it was well thought out, well vetted and supported by the

board and the administration. We were certainly led to believe that was the

direction of the board," he said.

King said in his experience if a public entity sinks $4 million of taxpayer

money into a project, it usually means the organization is going to go through

with the project.

If the college is too far along on its Mountain House plans, King said he would

have expected that the same reasoning would have applied to Lodi, especially

after several million dollars.

King didn't have an opinion on any possible plans for Delta's future in Lodi,

but Councilman Hansen said he's not expecting much.

"I don't have any confidence in them accomplishing anything at this

point," he said.
 

 

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