Bergen Community College


Bergen Community College is a public community college in Bergen County, New Jersey. It was founded in 1965 and opened in 1968. it is the largest community college in the state, with sites in Paramus, Hackensack, and Lyndhurst and approximately 13,000 students enrolled in degree programs, as well as approximately 5,800 in continuing and adult education programs. Michael D. Redmond, who had been president of the college since 2017, retired at the end of 2019; Anthony Ross is interim president. Federal data rank Bergen graduates first in earning the highest salaries among their peers from the state’s 19 two-year institutions, and even out-earning peers from some four-year colleges. Bergen has graduated more than half a million students with associate's degrees and certificates since its founding in 1968.
Bergen Community College is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools. Individual programs are accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs, the National League for Nursing, the American Dental Association, the Joint Review Committee on Education in Radiologic Technology, The National Accrediting Agency for Clinical Laboratory Services, and the American Physical Therapy Association. The Paralegal Studies program and the Legal Nurse Consultant program are approved by the American Bar Association.

Paramus campus

The college’s Paramus main campus includes the Technology Education Center, the Health Professions Integrated Teaching Center and the STEM Student Research Center.

Athletics

BCC is a member of the National Junior College Athletic Association in Region XIX and of the Garden State Athletic Conference. The college participates in the following intercollegiate sports:
In 2014, after Francis Schmidt, a tenured professor, filed a grievance over denial of sabbatical leave, The college suspended him for eight days and required him to consult a psychiatrist before returning to campus, claiming that a photo he posted to social media of his seven-year-old-daughter wearing a t-shirt quoting Game of Thrones character Daenerys Targaryen could be construed as a threat of violence against college officials. The college faculty cited the incident as a factor in a vote of "no confidence" in college president Kaye Walter. The suspension was rescinded, with Schmidt receiving back pay for the suspension period, and a college spokesman acknowledged to Schmidt that "By sanctioning you as it did, BCC may have unintentionally erred and potentially violated your constitutional rights, including under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution”. The Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression conferred one of its annual Jefferson Muzzle Awards for "the past year’s most outrageous and ridiculous affronts to free speech and press" on the college administration, declaring that it had "demonstrat its collective cluelessness on two distinct levels".

Notable alumni