San Mateo County Community College District


The San Mateo County Community College District is a community college system in California with three institutions: College of San Mateo in San Mateo, Cañada College in Redwood City, and Skyline College in San Bruno. The district serves more than 25,000 students each day with both day and evening classes.

History

San Mateo Junior College was founded in 1922, and the first classes started on August 22 in a building shared with San Mateo High School on Baldwin Avenue and San Mateo Drive. The first student was Marjorie Brace, who could not attend Stanford because of the high cost of tuition. Julio Bortolazzo is credited with the expansion of what had become the College of San Mateo into the three-college District. In 1956, he formed a 27-member Citizens Committee to study potential sites for a new campus for CSM, which by then occupied the training facility originally constructed for the United States Merchant Marine during World War II at Coyote Point. The final report filed by the Committee concluded that San Mateo County needed more than one community college.
County voters overwhelmingly approved a $5.9 million bond issue in 1957 based on Committee recommendations, which provided funds to purchase the present-day College Heights campus for CSM as well as a site near Skyline and Sharp Park in San Bruno, which would become Skyline College. In 1962, the parcel for Cañada College on the border of Redwood City and Woodside was purchased. Voters approved another bond of $12.8 million in March 1964, which provided funds to construct Cañada College and Skyline College.
SB 850, introduced by State Senator Marty Block in 2014, allowed up to 15 community college districts within California to offer a single four-year baccalaureate degree program for a professional qualification that did not compete with existing four-year universities. SMCCCD officials pushed to have the district included in the pilot program, and the California Community Colleges Board of Governors selected the Respiratory Care program at Skyline to participate.
A 2015 investigation into Chancellor Ron Galatolo's expense reports showed that he had purchased alcohol with several meals, in violation of the District's strict no-alcohol policy; SMCCCD updated its administrative procedures three months later to allow senior administrators to purchase alcohol during business events. In mid-August 2019, Chancellor Galatolo stepped down and was named Chancellor Emeritus, a position with the same pay, while he leads a feasibility study for a California State University campus on the San Francisco Peninsula. According to the settlement signed by Galatolo and SMCCCD, the Chancellor Emeritus position will end on March 31, 2022. Shortly thereafter, the San Mateo County District Attorney executed search warrants for materials belonging to the district and Galatolo. These searches were related to "allegations of harassment and improper handling of construction contracts." Galatolo was subsequently placed on administrative leave in September 2019, and Michael Claire, the president of the College of San Mateo, was named acting SMCCCD Chancellor.

Governance

The district serves San Mateo County, and is governed by a six-member Board of Trustees. Five voting trustees are elected by County residents to serve a four-year term, and one nonvoting student trustee is elected by students for a one-year term.
In November 2018, two Trustees were elected according to Area in Areas 2 and 4 instead of from the County at-large. The remaining three Trustee Area elections will be held in 2020. The California Voting Rights Act of 2001 challenged the legality of at-large elections, leading to the adoption of Area-based elections. Various maps were drawn, and Scenario 4, the one selected, offered "areas... substantially equal in population and... cohesive, contiguous territory to the extent possible in compliance with legal requirements". The change to Area-based elections was approved by the Board on October 11, 2017 on a 3–2 vote, with Richard Holober and Dave Mandelkern opposed.
;Notes

Chancellors

Skyline College

Skyline offers more than 80 Associate Degree and Certificate programs.

[College of San Mateo]

University Center

The University Center at Cañada College was established in 2001 as a new model to provide four-year college degree programs.
Cañada College is the only community college in the state of California with a University Center which came into being through special state legislation sponsored by Assemblymember Lou Papan and with the support of the San Mateo County Community College District. This was a way to extend higher learning to peninsula residents that could not travel to the participating universities.
;San Francisco State University
;Notre Dame de Namur University
;Arizona State University