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Raw sewage and bursting pipes: Why California community colleges are asking voters for repairs

Davies Hall on the American River College campus in Sacramento on Oct. 9, 2024. The building was shut down on Sept. 8, 2023 because of seismic related safety issues.
Louis Bryant III
/
CalMatters
Davies Hall on the American River College campus in Sacramento on Oct. 9, 2024. The building was shut down on Sept. 8, 2023 because of seismic related safety issues.

This November, California voters will decide on Proposition 2, a $10 billion education bond. Some community colleges are counting on the money to fix critical buildings and protect the safety of students.

The sewer systems at two Los Angeles community colleges are about to fail 鈥 鈥渃atastrophically.鈥 Nearby, in Torrance, a community college shut down multiple buildings, some for weeks at a time, because the heating and cooling system is so old it broke.

Seismic engineers delivered a dire prediction to a Sacramento community college last year: a central building on campus might collapse.

Come Nov. 5, California voters will have a chance to help repair these ailing community college facilities. A 鈥測es鈥 vote on will allow the state to borrow $10 billion to construct new buildings or fix ailing ones at community colleges, public K-12 schools, and charter schools. While most of the money would favor K-12 districts, 15%, or $1.5 billion, would help community colleges.

Voting no would prevent the state from taking on more debt. California currently through bonds it has issued over the past 30 years, according to the Legislative Analyst鈥檚 Office. Every year, the state pays off a piece of that debt, plus interest payments. Opponents to the bond, such as Assemblymember Bill Essayli, , say lawmakers should have prioritized education in the annual budget rather than rely on interest payments that

The ballot proposition has broad support, including from both the California Democratic and Republican parties. A September survey from the Public Policy Institute of California found that of likely voters support it.

But it鈥檚 not guaranteed that the measure will pass. In 2016, California voters approved new bonds for schools and community colleges, but the most recent ballot proposition in 2020 failed.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been eight years since the last time that the state of California passed a statewide school bond, and so this Proposition 2 is urgently needed,鈥 said Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi, a , before emphasizing that the measure would not raise taxes. Muratsuchi sponsored that created the bond measure.

鈥楻aw sewage leaks鈥 and bursting pipes

In the past 10 years, El Camino College in Torrance has unveiled three new buildings 鈥 a student services center, a gymnasium, and a 鈥渃enter for applied technology.鈥 Combined, the new facilities cost roughly $100 million. The college also opened a new 7,800 seat, $48 million stadium on campus with space for pole vault, high jump, and steeplechase events.

Inside, these buildings are sleek and modern, with warm lighting and curated slabs of exposed wood. But the work of renovating and modernizing the entire campus isn鈥檛 done.

The community college has more than 7,000 feet of underground pipes that are 鈥渙bsolete鈥 and 鈥渁t risk of immediate failure,鈥 according to . These pipes use water to heat and cool campus buildings.

鈥淚magine you have thousands of students coming in and out of a building throughout the day,鈥 said Bob Suppelsa, the college鈥檚 vice president for administrative services. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have heat in those buildings, it鈥檚 not a very hospitable learning situation for the students.鈥

Electrical, internet, and sewage lines are also underground and often adjacent to the ailing water pipes, he said. 鈥淎 simple water line break can turn into multiple problems if it doesn鈥檛 get repaired quickly.鈥

The college made repairs as needed, but in the last few years the problems got worse, Suppelsa said. At that point, he decided to replace the whole system. The project will cost around $12 million, and the community college district is asking the state to contribute about three-quarters of that.

A 鈥測es鈥 vote on Proposition 2 will allow the state to borrow $10 billion to construct new buildings or fix ailing ones at community colleges, public K-12 schools, and charter schools.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state鈥檚 finance department will make the final decisions about which community college projects receive bond money. The Community Colleges Chancellor鈥檚 Office will make recommendations based on a scoring system that favors safety and projects that fix conditions endangering students鈥 lives. Fixing El Camino College鈥檚 heating system is currently one of the top three projects in the state, according to initial recommendations that the chancellor鈥檚 office shared with CalMatters.

Although Muratsuchi represents the region served by El Camino College, he said he wasn鈥檛 aware of the infrastructure problems at the school and said he had no role in the ranking process.

The other highest-ranked projects are also in Los Angeles County and include repairs at Los Angeles Pierce College and Los Angeles Valley College. At both colleges, the sewage pipes are so old, reports said, that they might crack, leading to and

The chancellor鈥檚 office provided CalMatters with a list of 27 potential projects, which are located across the state and represent about half of the total $1.5 billion in proposed bond funds. Hoang Nguyen, director of facilities planning for the chancellor鈥檚 office, said the state would draft additional proposals if voters approve the ballot proposition.

A building on the brink of collapse

Even if it鈥檚 approved, the bond money will only help a fraction of the colleges that need repairs or new facilities. Nguyen said the state鈥檚 116 community college campuses would need at least $28 billion to address all of their facilities needs 鈥 and that鈥檚 just the current list.

Some expensive and urgent projects aren鈥檛 yet on the roster of needed repairs. In August 2023, for example, the Los Rios Community College District, located in the Sacramento area, received a final report from an engineer that found Davies Hall at American River College was at risk of 鈥渃atastrophic failure鈥 in the event of a big earthquake. The district decided to close the building as soon as possible. At the time, about 3,000 students were taking classes there, according to campus spokesperson Gabe Ross.

Students walk near Portable Village, a temporary learning structure created in response to the closure of Davies Hall in 2023, at American River College in Sacramento, on Oct. 9, 2024.
Louis Bryant III
/
CalMatters
Students walk near Portable Village, a temporary learning structure created in response to the closure of Davies Hall in 2023, at American River College in Sacramento, on Oct. 9, 2024.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the largest instructional building, at our largest college, in the second-largest district in the state,鈥 said Mario Rodriguez, executive vice chancellor for finance and administration at the Los Rios Community College District.

The campus has been in flux ever since. Some classes went online while others moved into temporary classroom space. Constructing a permanent replacement for Davies Hall will cost the district more than $50 million, Ross said.

Most projects, even urgent ones, are the result of years of work spent evaluating the problem and gathering cost estimates. Rodriguez said the district plans to finalize and submit its proposal for state bond dollars by the end of the year.

If it does, and voters approve the bond measure, Davies Hall is practically guaranteed to receive some money because this summer state legislators added language that asks the community college system to make it a 鈥渢op priority.鈥

But if voters say no, Rodriguez said he isn鈥檛 confident that a local bond measure could easily generate the same amount of money. In 2020, the community college district put a local bond on the Sacramento County ballot. It failed.

Adam Echelman covers California鈥檚 community colleges in partnership with Open Campus, a nonprofit newsroom focused on higher education.

 is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics. 

Adam Echelman covers higher education for CalMatters, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics, and a JPR news partner