Grand jury recommends community sever ties with Delta
July
14, 2014
Stockton
Record
By
Alex Breitler, Staff Writer
Calaveras County should sever ties with San
Joaquin Delta College, that county's civil grand jury has concluded.
Calaveras residents are paying millions into
Delta's voter-approved Measure L bond, but the county "has not received
the benefits" that were promised, the report says.
Shifting northern Calaveras County into the
Yosemite Community College District - southern Calaveras is already within that
district's boundaries - would increase the county's electoral strength and give
it a more unified voice, the grand jury found.
Dave Tanner, a Calaveras planner who ran
unsuccessfully for the Delta College Board of Trustees in 2012, said Calaveras
taxpayers are spending $1.5 million to $2 million a year for their share of the
$250 million bond, and feel they haven't gotten enough in return.
The 2004 bond listed an "education
center" in the Mother Lode as one of many planned improvements. A decade
later, no center has been built.
"This sounds terrible, but it's
reality," Tanner said. "(Calaveras residents) feel like they're a
sugar daddy and they can't afford it. This is not a rich community."
Delta trustee Steve Castellanos, who
represents Calaveras County, said the grand jury's report did not recognize a
renewed effort to get classes started in the area. Delta officials on Friday
announced four classes would be held at Calaveras High School in San Andreas in
the fall, and Castellanos said the plan is to further increase course offerings
over the next two to three years.
Ultimately, Calaveras students should be able
to satisfy their general education requirements there, Delta President Kathy Hart
said earlier this week. Hart said Delta's intention is to work with the
neighboring Yosemite district to provide the classes students need.
Delta has offered courses in Calaveras County
in the past, but the four courses this fall will be the most in "a really
long time," Hart said.
"During the budget cuts and the whole
recession we really didn't offer much of anything up there," Hart said,
adding that she recognized Calaveras residents have "not been pleased with
us."
While the grand jury report cites past
reports that Delta improperly spent bond money, Delta officials have said there
hasn't been enough student demand in Calaveras to justify a brick-and-mortar
campus, and that there isn't enough money left to build one anyhow.
Whether Calaveras County could easily divest
itself from Delta is unlikely. Tanner admitted that it might require an act of
legislation.
The grand jury recommended that the Calaveras
County Board of Supervisors "support a legal petition requesting
secession" from the college, if such a petition is filed.
Delta trustees will consider a response to
the grand jury report at their meeting on Tuesday.
Contact reporter Alex Breitler at (209)
546-8295 or abreitler@recordnet.com.
Follow him at www.recordnet.com/breitlerblog
and on Twitter @alexbreitler.
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