Los Angeles Times

Voters to weigh college building bond

Los Angeles district’s $5.3-billion plan to update campuses is criticized over timing.

- By Debbie Truong

The Los Angeles Community College District will go to voters in November asking homeowners to tax themselves between $88 and $157 a year — and in some cases more — so the district can borrow billions of dollars in what would be its largesteve­r constructi­on bond program.

College trustees, who approved the $5.3-billion bond measure 6 to 1 last month, filed paperwork Thursday with the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk for inclusion of the measure on the Nov. 8 general election ballot.

Supporters say the infusion of cash is necessary to revamp aging buildings, upgrade athletic fields and outfit classrooms with new technology across the district’s nine campuses, the largest community college system in California.

“Students deserve excellent teaching and learning facilities,” LACCD Chancellor Francisco Rodriguez said at a July 6 meeting. “We know that when students are connected to campus, when they engage … our students do better.”

But critics question the timing and necessity of the ballot measure. They argue it is wasteful to spend billions of dollars on campus infrastruc­ture amid signifi

cant enrollment declines and an unstable economy.

At least 55% of voters must approve the ballot measure in November for it to pass. According to the district, the bond could cost property owners up to $25 per $100,000 of assessed value for nearly 25 years.

For homeowners, the estimated annual property tax payment for the bond would probably range from about $88 to $157, according to the district, but could be more for high-valued homes. The district did not provide estimated calculatio­ns for nonresiden­tial property.

Ernest Moreno, the lone trustee who voted no, said it is inappropri­ate to spend money on new constructi­on when the community college district lost tens of thousands of students over the last several years.

Between 2019-20 and 2020-21, enrollment plummeted to 220,986 students — a decline of nearly 27,000 learners, according to state data. Many students have also opted to continue taking classes online.

“This is an inappropri­ate time and essentiall­y an irresponsi­ble act on our behalf to pursue this bond,” Moreno said. “What I’m fearful is we’re building a ghost town.”

Moreno said in a phone interview that he supported previous bond measures. Over the last two decades, voters have greenlight­ed more than $9 billion in bonds for the district.

But the system’s history with managing projects financed by bonds has at times been marked by troubles.

A 2011 investigat­ion by The Times exposed financial waste, nepotism and mismanagem­ent of projects the district paid for through bonds.

Following The Times’ report, district officials vowed strict oversight of public money. Even so, the last bond measure in 2016, which supported a $3.3-billion plan to upgrade outdated buildings, spurred lawsuits, political infighting and missed performanc­e targets.

Rolando Cuevas, a community activist who served as student body president at East Los Angeles College in the 1990s, worries the projects will benefit developers and constructi­on companies more than students.

He added that it is irresponsi­ble to take on debt given the economic climate.

“There’s nothing wrong with bonds when we need them,” Cuevas said. “What they’re doing here is unacceptab­le. The voters need to say ‘no.’ ”

This week, a constructi­on company filed a lawsuit against LACCD and its project team, alleging corruption and fraud over a long-delayed theater project at Los Angeles Valley College.

The company, Pinner Constructi­on Inc., and its subcontrac­tors accuse the project team of conspiring to delay the theater’s constructi­on so contractor­s could accumulate more billable hours. Trustees declined to comment on the litigation.

Trustees pledge the board has cleaned up its process for managing the implementa­tion of bonds.

Steve Veres, a trustee since 2011, said the projects covered under the current proposal target precise needs. Students’ learning experience­s will be boosted by improving aging buildings, including campus health centers and student unions, he said.

“Sometimes the way things were designed 50 years ago are not the best and most efficient uses for today,” Veres said. “We’re not adding square footage ... we’re improving the spaces that are there.”

If passed, $1.4 billion would go toward modernizin­g buildings constructe­d before the 1970s. An additional $732 million would pay for other campus infrastruc­ture, such as outdoor lighting, sidewalks and parking lots. The proposal also sets aside $500 million to “plan, construct, acquire or contribute” to housing for students and workers.

Money from the bonds would also finance upgrades to athletics facilities, including artificial turf installati­ons and replacing or resurfacin­g hard courts. It would also expand wireless internet access and equip classrooms with new technology, among more routine upgrades such as repairing aging sewer lines.

Renovation­s will alleviate the need for patchwork fixes, which have already cost the district millions of dollars, said Rueben Smith, a vice chancellor who oversees facilities for LACCD.

“We’ve had a multitude of breakdowns and failures with infrastruc­ture,” Smith said during the trustees meeting. “Breaks are not going to stop. We’ve already spent over $40 million in just repairs.”

The district commission­ed a research firm to survey nearly 900 voters about their opinions on a bond measure. The survey, conducted by Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin, Metz & Associates, found 6 in 10 voters would support the proposal.

The firm concluded the measure has “strong initial support that crosses nearly all geographic and demographi­c subgroups within the district,” according to a presentati­on to trustees about the survey.

Labor groups representi­ng workers in trades and vocational careers have expressed support.

Among them is Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers Local 11, a union that represents electricia­ns. Many of the 2,000 apprentice­s in IBEW’s electrical apprentice­ship program are taking classes or have graduated from the L.A. district, said Antonio Sanchez, the group’s political director.

“Many of our members know the system well and have benefited from it,” Sanchez said. “Frankly they deserve — along with everyone else in Los Angeles — first-class facilities.”

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