Programs include information technology, public safety administration, behavioral health science and education
The Maricopa Community College District, which includes 10 colleges across the Phoenix area, announced November 4 plans to launch its first baccalaureate degrees in programs including information technology, public safety administration, behavioral health science and education. The degree programs are expected to begin in fall 2023, pending approval.
Officials told the Arizona Republic that they worked to develop degrees in line with the new legislation’s guidelines. Senate Bill 1453, which was passed earlier this year, instructs community colleges wanting to offer four-year degrees to demonstrate workforce need in the region and student demand.
According to Helice Agria, Maricopa’s faculty district director for academic affairs, who is coordinating the four-year degree program efforts across the district, all the selected fields already exist as associate’s degrees or certificate programs. That means there’s a built-in pipeline of students who could move into the four-year degree.
Ms. Agria said that the district prioritized programs in “key industry sectors” that were discussed during the legislative process, such as education, health care, information technology and public safety administration, given workforce needs and the emphasis from lawmakers that represent the community.
District officials will spend the next year designing the courses and requirements for each of the degrees. “It’s a big step to name them, but it’s a lot more work to actually build them,” Agria said.
Maricopa Community Colleges’ planned four-year degrees include:
- Bachelor of Applied Sciences, programming and data analytics: Mesa Community College.
- BAS, information technology: Estrella Mountain Community College, Phoenix College.
- BAS, public safety administration: Phoenix College, Rio Salado College.
- BAS, nuclear medicine technology and computed tomography: GateWay Community College.
- Bachelor of Science, behavioral health science: South Mountain Community College.
- Bachelor of Arts, early childhood education-dual language: Mesa Community College.
- BA, Education, dual certification in elementary/special education: Glendale Community College, Paradise Valley Community College, Rio Salado College.
On November 2, 2021, the Arizona Supreme Court, after only two hours of deliberation, found that several provisions of the 2022 state budget, including a controversial ban on face mask mandates in K-12 schools, violate a provision of the state constitution requiring individual bills to encompass a single subject.
It was reported by the Arizona Republic newspaper and other media on November 1, 2021 that two nursing students have sued Maricopa Community Colleges over a requirement they get vaccinated against COVID-19. They claim the community college district is violating their free exercise of religion by not helping them to graduate as scheduled or providing preferred accommodations since they are refusing to get vaccinated for religious reasons.


Classes being offered for spring 2022 semester at the Career and Technical Education Center on the Verde Valley campus are already full or filling. Basic Carpentry II and Basic Residential Plumbing courses were filled almost as soon as the Community College published the list of available courses being offered in the spring 2022 session. The Basic Residential Plumbing course has only three seats left.
Community College President Dr. Lisa Rhine, Yavapai Community College Vice President of Community Relations and Student Development, Rodney Jenkins; Governing Board Chair Deb McCasland; Richard Hernandez, Director of the Regional Economic Development Center; representation from the Verde Valley Regional Economic Organization; and representation from the Clayton Company were all in attendance.
Every eight years the nursing program at Yavapai Community College is evaluated for reaccreditation by the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing (ACEN) The ACEN is recognized by the United States Department of Education (USDE) as a specialized accrediting agency. It is also recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA).
The list of persons attending the meeting included: Clarkdale mayor Robyn Prud’homme-Bauer; Yavapai Community College President Dr. Lisa Rhine, Yavapai Community College Vice President of Community Relations and Student Development, Rodney Jenkins; Governing Board Chair Deb McCasland; Richard Hernandez, Director of the Regional Economic Development Center; representation from the Verde Valley Regional Economic Organization; and representation from the Clayton Company.