Los Angeles Times

Voters leaning toward approval of Measure LA

The proposal would provide $5.3 billion for community college campus renovation­s.

- By Debbie Truong

Voters were leaning toward greenlight­ing $5.3 billion in campus renovation­s for the Los Angeles Community College District, evidently putting the need for modern learning facilities above complaints about the district’s troubled constructi­on program.

In early returns, three of the four incumbents on the district’s Board of Trustees — Steven Veres, Gabriel Buelna and Kelsey Iino — led their opponents by wide margins. Ernest Moreno, a longtime trustee, fell behind early Tuesday night to Sara

Hernandez, a progressiv­e candidate whose top priorities are providing housing, food and transporta­tion resources to students in need.

Moreno made up some ground to Hernandez throughout the night but continued to trail the newcomer by a wide margin two hours after polls closed.

The constructi­on proposal, called Measure LA, needs 55% of the vote to pass. The district, the largest community college jurisdicti­on in the country, includes nine campuses and sweeps across a 900-squaremile swath of Los Angeles County.

Francisco Rodriguez, chancellor of the Los Angeles Community College District, touted the early results as a sign of voters’ willingnes­s to invest in making higher education accessible.

“Very, very appreciati­ve of the confidence that the public and the L.A. voters are demonstrat­ing to our community colleges,” he said. “What we see these resources doing is providing exceptiona­l teaching and learning environmen­ts for our students.”

About $1.4 billion of the bond money would go toward renovating buildings constructe­d before the 1970s. The district also plans to equip classrooms with new technology, upgrade athletic fields and improve infrastruc­ture such as sewer lines, outdoor lighting and sidewalks.

All property owners, including owners of commercial buildings, would pay up to $25 per $100,000 of assessed value over the next 40 years for the bonds. The average homeowner could expect to pay $88 to $157 more in annual property taxes; the increase would be greater on pricey homes.

Measure LA, if passed, would be the fifth constructi­on bond measure voters approved for the community college district since 2001. The previous four totaled more than $9.5 billion.

The American Federation of Teachers 1521, a faculty union, and unions representi­ng trade and vocational workers supported the latest bond measure.

The proposal faced resistance from Moreno, who voted against putting the measure on the ballot. He said it was out of step with the district’s falling enrollment and rise in online classes.

Critics also took aim at mismanagem­ent of the district’s constructi­on projects. In 2011, The Times published an investigat­ion exposing financial waste and nepotism in a bond-funded constructi­on program.

More recently, an independen­t arbitrator found the district violated state requiremen­ts for “good faith and fair dealing” and ordered it to pay $3.2 million in compensati­on to Pinner Constructi­on Inc. over a long-delayed theater project at Los Angeles Valley College. After the arbitrator’s finding, the constructi­on company filed a lawsuit against district trustees, alleging corruption and fraud.

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? CRITICS HAVE pointed to mismanagem­ent of the community college district’s constructi­on projects.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times CRITICS HAVE pointed to mismanagem­ent of the community college district’s constructi­on projects.

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