HomeMy WebLinkAbout2017/05/22 - Agenda Packet - Special JointMAY 22, 2017 – 3:00 P.M.
CITY COUNCIL JOINT MEETING WITH
CHAFFEY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT
GOVERNING BOARD
SPECIAL MEETING AGENDA
Cultural Center, Celebration Hall
12505 Cultural Center Drive, Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91739
Page 1 of 2
City Council Joint Meeting with Chaffey Community College Board
CALL TO ORDER
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
ROLL CALL: City of Rancho Cucamonga:
Mayor Michael
Mayor Pro Tem Kennedy
Council Members Alexander, Spagnolo and Williams
Chaffey Community College District:
President Roberts
Vice President Brugger
Board Members McLeod, Ovitt and McDougal
Student Trustee Alwin
PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS
This is the time and place for the general public to address the City Council and Chaffey
Community College District Governing Board on any item listed on the agenda. State law
prohibits the City Council and Chaffey Community College District Governing Board from
addressing any issue not previously included on the Agenda. Comments are to be limited to
five minutes per individual or less, as deemed necessary by the Mayor, depending upon
the number of individuals desiring to speak.
ITEMS OF DISCUSSION
1.AN INTRODUCTION TO CHAFFEY COLLEGE (Dr. Henry Shannon, Superintendent/President)
2.CHAFFEY COLLEGE ECONOMIC IMPACT (Jim Fillpot, Dean of Institutional Research,
Policy and Grants)
Page 2 of 2
City Council Joint Meeting with Chaffey Community College Board
3.A. CHAFFEY COLLEGE WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT (Lisa Bailey, Associate
Superintendent of Business Services and Economic Development)
B. FIRE DISTRICT ALL RISK TRAINING CENTER - POTENTIAL PARTNERSHIPS ON
SPECIALIZED CLASSES, PREVENTION ACADEMY (Mike Costello, Fire Chief)
4.A. CHAFFEY COLLEGE FACILITIES AND SUSTAINABILITY UPDATE (Melanie Siddiqi,
Vice President of Administrative Affairs)
B. RANCHO CUCAMONGA SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITY ACTION PLAN AND SOLAR
PROJECTS (Fabian Villenas, Principal Management Analyst)
C. UPDATE ON RANCHO CUCAMONGA MUNICIPAL UTILITY (Fred Lyn, Utility Division
Manager)
D. UPDATE ON CITY INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS (Bill Wittkopf, Director of Public
Works Services and Jason Welday, Director of Engineering, City Engineer)
5.CITY/FIRE DISTRICT EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTER (EOC) UPGRADES AND
INTEROPERABILITY WITH CHAFFEY COLLEGE EOC (Mike Costello, Fire Chief)
6.CHAFFEY COLLEGE INSTRUCTIONAL UPDATE (Dr. Meridith Randall, Associate
Superintendent of Instruction and Institutional Effectiveness)
7.CHAFFEY COLLEGE STUDENT SERVICES UPDATE (Dr. Eric Bishop, Vice President of
Student Services)
8.A. CHAFFEY COLLEGE ELECTION DATE CHANGE AND REDISTRICTING (Dr. Henry
Shannon, Superintendent/President)
B. RANCHO CUCAMONGA CITY COUNCIL DISTRICT ELECTIONS (John Gillison, City
Manager)
ADJOURNMENT
CERTIFICATION
I, Linda A. Troyan, MMC, City Clerk Services Director of the City of Rancho Cucamonga,
hereby certify under penalty of perjury that a true, accurate copy of the foregoing agenda
was posted on May 18, 2017, per Government Code 54954.2 at Cultural Center, Celebration
Hall, at 12505 Cultural Center Drive; City Hall at 10500 Civic Center Drive, Rancho
Cucamonga, California; Chaffey Community College, Marie Kane Center for Student
Services/Administration, 5885 Haven Avenue, Rancho Cucamonga, California and on the
City’s and College’s websites.
______________________________
Linda A. Troyan, MMC
City Clerk Services Director
City of Rancho Cucamonga
If you need special assistance or accommodations to participate in this meeting, please
contact the City Clerk's office at (909) 477-2700. Notification of 48 hours prior to the
meeting will enable the City to make reasonable arrangements to ensure accessi bility.
Listening devices are available for the hearing impaired.
Joint Meeting
Rancho Cucamonga City Council
Chaffey College Governing Board
May 22, 2017
Henry D. Shannon, Ph.D.
Superintendent/President
Presentation by:
District Campuses
3
Groundbreaking
Rancho Cucamonga Campus, 1958
4
Construction of Gym, 1958
5
6
Aerial View
Rancho Cucamonga Campus, 1960
7
Chaffey College inspires hope and success
by improving lives and our community in
a dynamic, supportive, and engaging
environment of educational excellence
where our diverse students learn and
benefit from foundation, career, and
transfer programs.
Mission Statement
8
Chaffey College: Improving lives through education.
Vision
9
10
•Student Success
•Educational Excellence
•Climate of Inclusion and Respect
•Dynamic Student Services
•Responsiveness to the Community
•Environmental Responsibility
Core Values
Achieved Excellence
in Four Areas:
Completion Outcomes
Labor Market Outcomes
Learning Outcomes
Equitable Outcomes
Aspen Award Winners
11
Questions?
12
The Economic Value of
Chaffey College
Economic Impact &
Investment Analysis
FY 2014-15
10,376
Jobs Supported in
the Region
2.0%
Of Region’s GRP
Overview of Findings
$617.3 Million
Total Income
Supported in the
Region
14.6%
Rate of Return to
Students
7.2%
Rate of Return to
Taxpayers
Operations
Spending Impact
College payroll and
other spending
$83.6 Million
Added Regional
Income
OR
1,297
Jobs Supported in
Region
Student
Spending Impact
Out-of-District
student spending
$26.4 Million
Added Regional
Income
OR
490
Jobs Supported in
Region
Alumni
Impact
Higher alumni earnings and
increased business profit
$507.4 Million
Added Regional
Income
OR
8,589
Jobs Supported in
Region
Student
Perspective
Cost: $184 million
Tuition, supplies,
opportunity cost
3.8
Benefit/Cost ratio
14.6%
Rate of return
Future benefits are discounted to the present.
Benefit: $702 million
Higher future earnings
Taxpayer
Perspective
Benefit: $251 million
Future tax revenue,
government savings
Cost: $96 million
State & local funding
2.6
Benefit/Cost ratio
7.2%
Rate of return
Social
Perspective
Benefit: $3.2 billion
Future earnings, tax revenue,
public/private savings
Cost: $317 million
Student & all college costs
10.2
Benefit/Cost ratio
N/A
Rate of return
Degrees & Certificates AwardedDegrees and Certificates Awarded
2007-08 through 2016-17 (proj.)
Chaffey College Economic
Development
Workforce Training
Employment Training Panel
Customized Training
Contract Education
Career Placement Assistance
CalWORKs
Vocational Education
•High Growth/High Compensation Careers
•Multiple Pathways
•Industry-Driven Training Objectives
•Employability Skills/Placement
•Regional Coordination
•Funding Opportunities
Workforce Focus:
Partnership Opportunities
•Public Works/Building & Safety Academy
•AA/AS Cohort for Rancho Cucamonga City Employees
•Employee Retention Skills
•Joint Professional Development Workshops
•Rapid Response and Streamlined Workforce Training
InTech Center
•$15m DOL Grant to provide regional advanced manufacturing
training
•Partnership includes 12 colleges & universities, public
agencies, and over 15 industry partners
•Rapid training response to industry in areas such as: Industrial
Maintenance, Industrial Electrical, Pre-Engineering, HVAC,
Control Systems Technology, and more in development.
•Magnet to attract business and industry to our region
Facilities & Sustainability Updates
JOINT COUNCIL/BOARD MEETING WITH THE CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
Presented by:
Melanie Siddiqi
Vice President, Administrative Affairs
May 22, 2017
FACILITIES UPDATE
Measure L Buildout Plan
Planetarium
Wignall Museum/Gallery
Theatre Wings
Shade Structure
East Plaza
Facilities Master Plan
Vision 2025 Facilities Master Plan
Rancho Campus: 4 New Structures
(Student Services, Instructional, Library, Parking Structure)
Fontana Campus: 3 New Buildings
(Student Activities, Student Support and Instructional)
Chino Campus: 1 New Instructional Building
Recycled Shipping Containers Project
The District will be incorporating the use of recycled
shipping containers as solutions for bookstore, food
services, indoor and outdoor dining/gathering space,
and other mixed -use services at the Chino and Fontana
campuses.
SUSTAINABILITY UPDATE
Thermal Energy Storage (TES) Tank
•700,000 gallon tank that provides for
increased cooling demands by
supplementing existing chiller capacity
•Shifts the operation of chillers to off-peak
hours of operation.
•Anticipated annual cost savings: $260,000
•Projected incentive for participating in
SCEs Permanent Load Shifting Program:
$700,000.
Water Conservation Efforts
Action:
•Adjusted irrigation schedules
•Conducted daily irrigation patrols
•Completed frequent irrigation clock audits
•Conducted long range weather monitoring
•Engaged staff
Results:
•Achieved cost savings of approximately
$30,000
•Reduced overall water consumption by
approximately 50 million gallons (or 40%)
over an 18 month period
Xeriscaping Project
Carbon Footprint Reduction
•Removed 13 older fleet vans and trucks
•Transitioned to 13 new zero-emission
electric Club Car 300’s.
•Reduced the college’s gasoline
consumption by 6,637 gallons over the
prior year, resulting in a cost savings of
approximately $20,000.
Solar Carports
•3 sites,totaling 5,660 kilo-Watts (kW)or 5.66
mega -Watts (MW)of direct current (DC)rated
power capacity.
•The system size by campus is as follows:
Rancho Cucamonga –4,580 kW DC
Chino –775 kW DC
Fontana –305 kW DC
•The project will offset more than 90% of the
college’s annual electricity usage.
•A resolution to approve the energy services
contract is being presented to the Board on
Thursday.
Thank You
Community Based Plan
Community Survey
1,000 respondents
Community Forum & Sustainability Expo
200+ residents & 20 organizations
Task Force
25 community partners, schools, and
businesses
Interdepartmental Group
12 Departments
Stakeholder Interviews
20 individuals
Sustainable Community
Action Plan Topics
Transportation + Mobility
Examines mobility options within the community, including walking, biking, driving, and
taking public transit.
Land Use + Open Space
Discusses land use decisions and how they affect overall health and sustainability of
Rancho Cucamonga.
Energy Efficiency + Renewables
Covers opportunities to improve efficiency and the use of renewable energy in the
City.
Green Building Performance
Examines opportunities to develop, maintain, and operate buildings in a manner that
utilizes resources efficiently and improves the health of building occupants.
Water + Wastewater
Discusses use and conservation of water resources as well as reuse of treated
wastewater in Rancho Cucamonga
Waste Reduction
Discusses opportunities for reducing non-recyclable materials, including organic, and
increasing the city’s waste diversion rates.
SolarRC Expansion Project
Central Park
Solar RC Expansion City Sites
Epicenter and Animal Center
Solar RC Expansion Fire District Sites
Banyan Fire StationDay Creek Fire Station
Solar RC Expansion Benefits
$1 million in Solar Rebates
Estimated Energy Cost Savings $6.6 million
GHG Offset of 33,788 metric tons
Equivalent of taking 7,100 cars off the road
SHADED PARKING
Opportunity to Educate!
Sustainability update on
Rancho Cucamonga
Municipal Utility
Astoria 2 Solar Project
•Built by Recurrent Energy
•Located in Rosamond (Kern County)
•Commercial Operation in Oct 2016
•75 MW Total Capacity
•RCMU: 6 MW share
•~19,000 MWh / year (over 3,000 homes)
•20 year term fixed contract
The Boulder Canyon Project
•Hoover Dam at Lake Mead
•Federal resource began providing hydroelectricity power in 1936
•Carbon free resource
•2047 MW capacity
•RCMU: 3 MW peak Share
•~6,600 MWh annually
•50 year contract term begins October 2017.
What does this mean for RCMU?
•48% of our portfolio is
Carbon Free in 2017!
•Diversify our power
portfolio with
renewables
•33% by 2020
•50% by 2030
•Meet Carbon standards
•Maintain rate stability
Hoover Hydro (9%)
Astoria 2 Solar
(24%)
City Solar (2%)
PowerEx Wind
(13%)
CAISO System
Power (52%)
Streetlight Acquisition from SCE
Streetlight Acquisition from SCE
•City is acquiring 15,299
streetlights
•Expected ownership
transfer:
•Start: July/Aug 2017
•End: Dec 2017/Jan 2018
•Install LED lighting
•~$900K in avg. annual
net savings to the
City’s SLDs
•15 year ROI
LED Lighting Advantages
•Visually appealing
•Better design and
photometrics
•Less maintenance
•80% reduction in fixture
maintenance costs
•50% reduction in
energy use
Baseline Road LED Retrofit Pilot Project
Hellman Avenue8th Street
Metrolink Tracks
Hellman Avenue Widening and Railroad Crossing Improvements
Amethyst AvenueSR-210
19th Street
Upper Cucamonga Storm Drain Phase 3 Improvements
Base Line RoadHellman Avenue
Citywide Pavement Rehabilitation
100
0
70
50
25
Good / Excellent
At Risk
Poor
Very Poor / Failed
Preventative
Maintenance
Thin AC Overlays
Thick AC Overlays
Reconstruction
Civic Center Landscape Renovation
Civic Center Landscape Renovation
Civic Center Landscape Renovation
Civic Center Landscape Renovation
Terra Vista Parkway Landscape Renovation
Base Line Median East of Haven
Base Line South Side East of Haven
Base Line South Side East of Haven
Questions?
CHAFFEY COLLEGE Instructional Updates
May 22, 2017
ACCREDITATION
Chaffey College was reaccredited for 7 years in February 2017
Next visit from accreditor will be in 2023 –until then, the College has
informed the Commission it will focus on equity, efficiency and
communication
Twelve commendations, including the quality of its research, its focus
on student success and equity, and its dedication to the mission
Three minor recommendations
NEW FACULTY AND PROGRAMS
12 new faculty added for Fall 2017, including American Sign
Language, Computer Science, Biology, Math and African-American
History
Programs completed or being developed in Welding, Pre-Law
Pathway, Social Justice, Social Media, Substance Abuse Counseling,
Fire Prevention and Industrial Mechanics
This summer, several faculty will work on non-credit programs, which
are free of charge to students
HEALTH SCIENCES
Health science jobs continue to increase in the Inland Empire and
CJUHSD is planning a health science-focused high school
In July, a dedicated and experienced Health Sciences Dean will come
on board
Her charge will be to strengthen current programs and examine new
opportunities, such as Clinical Medical Assistant and Physical Therapy
Some new programs may be non-credit
ADULT EDUCATION AND HIGH SCHOOL
PARTNERSHIPS
We continue to have a capture rate from area high schools that is
below the state average of about 30%
We are also not intentionally reaching out to and serving working
adults
In July, a Director of Adult Education and High School Partnerships will
join the college
Immediate goals are to reach the working adult population and also
create clearer pathways from HS programs to the college
GUIDED PATHWAYS
Chaffey College is part of a select group of 20 community colleges
chosen to implement “guided pathways”
Guided Pathways is a nationwide movement at colleges to ensure that
students enter a clear pathway from the start of their college careers
and that the college assists them in staying on a pathway that leads to
a viable career goal
It will involve student services as well as instruction and challenges us
to re-examine strategies that have not been successful
SCHEDULING GOALS
In Fall 2017, we will offer some short-term certificates during evenings
or on weekends for working adults to move into better-paying careers
Our online offerings comprise about 20% of current classes, and we
will continue to build that option
We are tentatively planning to move from an 18-week semester to 16
weeks by 2018-19, which will allow us to offer more summer sessions
and a winter intersession
OTHER GOALS AND CHALLENGES
Chaffey’s enrollment has grown 12% in the last two years, and we
need to sustain and probably build on that number to maintain state
funding
The Rancho campus is nearing capacity for face-to-face classes
Other colleges continue to encroach on our district due to their own
declining enrollments
We are having increasing difficulty staffing classes with part-time
faculty
QUESTIONS?
MAY 22, 2017
STUDY SESSION
STUDENT SERVICES
CHAFFEY COLLEGE /
CITY OF RANCHO CUCAMONGA
JOINT MEETING
STUDENT PROFILE
Predominant majors or areas of student interest:
•Associate Degree Nursing (ADN)
•Associate Degree Nursing:VN to RN
•Psychology for Transfer (AD-T)
•Radiologic Technology
•Business Administration for Transfer (AD-T)
•Biology (AS)
•University Studies –Social and Behavioral Sciences Emphasis (CSUGE)
•Child Development and Education (AS)
•Engineering (AS)
•Business Management (AS)
STUDENT PROFILE
Age:District-wide:Average Age is 24.94 years;
Youngest student: 14 years (29% age 19 or younger)
Oldest student: 81 years (18% age 30 or older)
Ethnicities:
•African American:9.1%
•Asian:5.5%
•Caucasian:15.9%
•Filipino:2.6%
•Hispanic:64%
•Native American:0.5%
•Pacific Islander:0.4%
•Other Race/Ethnicity:3%
•No Response:2.6%
STUDENT PROFILE
Males vs. Female ratio:
•41.0% male; 56% female; 3% declined to state/unknown
FT vs. PT ratios:
•25.7% full-time; 74.3% part-time (Spring 2017)
•346 students (1.68% of the total student population) enrolled
exclusively in non-credit courses
•27.7% full-time; 72.3% part-time (Fall 2016)
STUDENT PROFILE
Income levels: average, high, low
•Less than $17,655 –11.9%
•$17,656 to $23,895 –7.0%
•$23,896 to $30,135 –5.9%
•$30,136 to $36,375 –5.4%
•$36,376 to $42,615 -5.8%
•$42,616 to $48,885 -6.7%
•$48,856 to $55,095 –6.3%
•$55,096 to $61,335 –5.3%
•$61,336 to $67,575 –4.4%
•$67,576 to $73,815 –5.0%
•$73,816 to $80,055 –6.5%
•$80,056 or higher –29.8%
Examining Financial Aid data, in 2015-16 (most recent full-year data available):
•18,740 students (66.3% of the totalunduplicated student population)received one or more financial aidawards
•Many students received multiplefinancial aid awards: 56,977financial aid awards wereconferred in 2015-16
•In 2015-16, Chaffey Collegestudents received $42,257,608 infinancial aid awards
100TH COMMENCEMENT
•First time off-campus (CBBA)
•Richard Montanez guest
speaker
100TH COMMENCEMENT
•More than 2,300 eligible students
•More than 850 student participants
•More than 8,000 total guests
•Class of 2017
•More than 5,100 awards
•Nearly 3,200 degrees
•More than 1,900 certificates
PANTHER PROMISE DESIGN
Background:
“Panther Promise”: Collaboration between Chaffey College and the
school districts within its service area. These cities include Chino, Chino
Hills, Fontana, Montclair, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, and Upland.
The Promise:
•The “Panther Promise” is a Last Dollar program
•Up to $1,000 for the first two years of college to cover outstanding
tuition, fees and books
PANTHER PROMISE DESIGN
Program Goals:
•Increase college going rates of residents living in the service area
•Introduce students to college opportunities, including:
•Four-year degrees
•Two-year degrees
•Certificate programs for job and career attainment
•Beginning in the sixth grade at area middle schools
PANTHER PROMISE DESIGN
K-12 school partners:
•Chino Valley School District
•Fontana Unified School District
•Upland Unified School District
•Ontario/Montclair School District
•Cucamonga School District
•Etiwanda School District
•Central School District
•Alta Loma School District
•Chaffey Joint Union High School
District
Four-year transfer partners:
•California State University, San
Bernardino
•California Polytechnic University,
Pomona
•University of California, Riverside
PANTHER PROMISE DESIGN
City Partners:
•Chino
•Chino Hills
•Fontana
•Montclair
•Ontario
•Rancho Cucamonga
•Upland
Other Potential Partners:
•Chaffey College Foundation
•Mayors/City Councils
•City Managers
•Chambers of Commerce
•Private Foundations
•School District Foundations
•Area charter and privatemiddle and high schools
•Area Independent andPrivate Universities
Even Year Elections
and Redistricting
May 22, 2017
Henry D. Shannon, Ph.D.
Superintendent/President
Presentation by:
Even Year Elections/Redistricting
•November 16, 2016 –Governing Board adopts
resolution 111616 to change its regular election to
June of even-numbered years.
•December 15, 2016 –Governing Board adopts
resolution 121516 to establish trustee areas and to
elect board members in a by-trustee area election
process.
•May 23, 2017 –San Bernardino County Board of
Supervisors expected to vote on Chaffey College
resolution 111616.
3
Existing Boundaries
Scenario Map
District A
District A consists of most of Rancho
Cucamonga, the northern portion of Fontana
and the unincorporated county area
surrounded by those two cities.
Questions?
7
Handout available at the 05-20-2017 Joint Chaffey Special Council Meeting
Handout available at the 05-20-2017 Joint Chaffey Special Council Meeting
Handout available at the 05-20-2017 Joint Chaffey Special Council Meeting
Handout available at the 05-20-2017 Joint Chaffey Special Council Meeting
Handout available at the 05-20-2017 Joint Chaffey Special Council Meeting
Handout available at the 05-20-2017 Joint Chaffey Special Council Meeting
Handout available at the 05-20-2017 Joint Chaffey Special Council Meeting