Archive for Underserving the Verde Valley – Page 3

Great performance; lousy notice; poor setting

“Terrific” Ahn Trio live shortened performance draws audience of only 19; absence of local advertising continues to haunt Verde Campus special events; M-137 poor music venue

The Ahn Trio performed live in at a shortened classical music concert on the Verde Campus in room M-137 Friday evening (tickets $15 & $20). The tiny audience thoroughly enjoyed the concert, which was lively and “fun.” They were invited to attend the full concert in Prescott scheduled for Saturday.

This was the fourth college cultural event held in the last two months where there was little or no adequate notice about it. The result has been a turnout of an audience of 2, 2, 7 and now 19 respectively for the four shows.

The drawbacks to how the College is trying to provide these events to the community is obvious. The setting for them is dreadful. There is, for example, neither a stage nor tiered seating. This makes it impossible for most of an audience to see the performers. If there had been a large turnout for the Ahn concert, the view of the players would have been blocked by persons sitting in front of them.

Ahn trio

Ahn Trio

Acoustics are poor as the music must be amplified. M—137 is clearly not suitable for serious indoor concerts.

On the Prescott side of the mountain, the College prints, distributes, and mails a 20 page 4-color professionally designed booklet that contains the entire 2014-15 concert season. This information goes out well before the season begins. No similar effort is made in the Verde Valley. The Verde events are held with minimal notice and appear to be selected on an ad hoc basis.

Millions of dollars have been spent on the College theatre on the Prescott campus, which now rivals a New York theatre. Recently, the seating was replaced and the inside renovated at a cost to taxpayers of hundreds of thousands of dollars to improve site lines. The total renovation cost to the Prescott dinner theatre is at least $5 million dollars. There is nothing remotely like the Prescott theatre on the Verde campus and no effort is being made by the College to provide one for the Verde Valley.

All in all, the College is presenting a series of cultural programs on an ad hoc basis in a setting that discourages most residents from attending; even if they knew about them.

$5 Million dollar new Art/Music Building on Prescott campus

Administrators recommend  $5 Million dollars to renovate Building #15 to house Art and Music on Prescott campus; Request illustrates impact of concentrated music program development on West side of County while ignoring East side of County

The Yavapai Community College administrators are asking the Governing Board to approve  $5 million dollars to construct  Art and Music facilities in Building #15 on the Prescott campus. The request appears in the draft capital improvement plan submitted to the Governing Board at its February, 2015  meeting.

Music notesThe $5 million dollar request is in part the culmination of a specific effort on the Prescott campus to develop music courses while ignoring music development in the Verde Valley. For example, by the fall of 2014 the Community College listed 87 separate courses of music instruction and 16 areas of music concentration that students might consider. However, of the 87 courses, 85 are taught only on the Prescott campus; two music courses existed at the Sedona Center for Arts and Technology campus. None appear online.UNDER CONSTRUCTION

In the spring, 2015 the College Registration catalog listed over 100 music courses being offered on the Prescott campus. It listed less than six on the Verde campus.

The Yavapai Community College Foundation has no doubt played a significant role in pushing for development of the facility with its Friends of Music Auxiliary. The Auxiliary has an outstanding membership made up mostly of Prescott and Prescott Valley residents. It has provided scholarship assistance to outstanding student musicians and co-sponsored musical events with the music department.

Verde Valley on the losing side of history

Essay provides a short history of the contest between the Verde Valley and Prescott over location and operation of Yavapai Community College

Analysis

Analysis

History is the witness that testifies to the passing of time; it illumines reality, vitalizes memory, provides guidance in daily life, and brings us tidings of antiquity.
Marcus Tullius Cicero

There is a long history of political domination of the West side of the County over the East side. Domination began in 1966-67 when there was a fierce contest between the citizens in the Verde Valley and those in Prescott over where the first Community College would be located. The Gulf States and Industries Corporation offered $1.5 million dollars in financing for student dormitories and a student center, an outright gift of $100,000 for building purposes, and 165 acres of what was described as “prime land in the Clarkdale area” of the Verde Valley.

A site review conducted by Northern Arizona University recommended Clarkdale as the most desirable location for the first Yavapai Community College. Despite the site review and the offer by the Gulf States and Industries Corporation, the Verde Valley failed in its effort to establish the first community college there.  Rather, Prescott was  selected by the State Junior College Board as the location for the Community College.

Voters on May 23, 1967 approved 3011 to 2904 (107 margin) a $2.5 million dollar bond for the creation of Yavapai College.  It is said that almost everyone in the Verde Valley voted against the proposal because of their anger over the decision by the State Junior College Board to not locate the college in the Verde Valley.

In 1975 another dispute arose between the Verde Valley and Prescott over the Community College. The dispute was twofold: When would initial construction of the Verde campus begin? Could the Verde campus be administratively separated from the control of Prescott? The buildings were eventually constructed on the Verde campus but the idea of a separate administrative college modeled after those in Maricopa County was rejected.  Read More→

Elevator at Performing Arts Center

Construction of $750,000 elevator for Performing Arts Center on Prescott campus begun

Elevator construction 1

Photo from Governing Board agenda of February, 2014.

It was announced at the December Governing Board meeting that construction has begun on an elevator for the Performing Arts Center. Budget estimates for this project put the total cost at around $750,000 (see February 2014 proposed capital budget  in February, 2014 Governing Board agenda).  Over the last four years, the Community College has allocated an estimated $5 million dollars in upgrades to the Performing Arts Center on the Prescott campus. The facility is used almost entirely by Prescott and Prescott Valley residents. Most of the cost of the upgrades is being paid by Yavapai County taxpayers. 

 

Comprehensive review of campus projects and plans since 1994

Complete collection of Master plans, visions, projects, undertaken since 1994 now available in one pdf file

FUTURE PLANThe Blog has gathered together in one pdf file a history of College Master plans and documents created by others related to the College. The material goes from 1994 to 2013. and others since 1994.  There is an emphasis on the plans and visions for the future of the Verde Valley.    You can access the actual plans, visions and projects as they were actually written and presented by clicking here. MASTER_PLANS_VISIONS_PROJECTS_1994 TO 2014.  

East and West County High School CTEC training opportunities differ

Whether you live on the East or West side of the County makes a big difference to high school students when it comes to educational opportunities

CTEC6The opportunity for high school students in the County to take classes at the Yavapai Community College Career and Technical Education Center (CTEC) differ greatly.  Whether you can attend turns on which side of Mingus Mountain you live on.

If you live on the Prescott side of Mingus Mountain, you can attend classes at CTEC, which is becoming a state-of-the-art training center.  If you live on the East side of Mingus Mountain, you cannot attend classes at CTEC.

The Blog has asked the College to provide it with the number of students from the West side of the Mountain that attended CTEC this fall (a spring 2014 estimate put the number at 200).    So far, it has not replied to the request.  It is clear that no students from the East side of the Mountain attended classes there.  Hopefully, when the College reopens following the holidays, accurate information about high school student enrollment at CTEC will be made available.

Great concert; small turn-out

Great concert; small audience mark Thursday’s Choral Collage on Verde campus

Two of the six Yavapai Community College choral groups performed Thursday evening, October 30 at M-137 on the Verde campus. The Camerata Singers, directed by Dennis L. Houser, were followed by the YC Gospel choir, directed by Christoper Eubank, in the 80 minute program. It was an enjoyable evening with the singers and songs enthusiastically and appreciatively received by the audience. (The lighting should have followed the same scheme used at the Performing Arts Center for similar concerts; it did not.)

Black-and-White-Choir-Hands-Clipart-300x142Unfortunately, the audience numbered only about two dozen, which didn’t quite equal the sum of the membership of the two choral groups. The reasons for the disappointing turn-out are fairly obvious. First, the concert was not widely advertised—few who did not pick up a flyer on the Verde campus were aware of it. Second, the concert was not a part of an announced fall program, which would have allowed persons to plan their schedules in advance so they could attend the event. The concert announcement also sort of “just appeared” only a week or ten days before it was to be held.

Third, most, if not all members of the groups, are from the Prescott area. That meant that local word of mouth from friends and families in the Verde Valley about the event was absent, which made it even harder to draw a first-time audience to a first-time event. Finally, it drew no one outside the Verde Valley such as from Prescott. It’s too far to drive at night.

The College is to be commended for trying to revive the Verde campus and open itself to the community with concerts and small shows after a decade of doing little. However, that revival will not come overnight. It will take time to get the word out to the community about the outstanding programs and renewed interest of the college in the communities it serves in the Verde Valley. To be successful, these events will require much better planning and far better advertising.

Lack of training opportunity discriminates against Verde Valley high school students

Outstanding new Electrical Utility Technology Program not available to high school students in Eastern Yavapai County; open to high school students on the West side of the County

If you want to see educational opportunity discrimination against the East side of Yavapai County at work, take a look at the new Electrical Utility Technology program based on the West side of the County at CTEC on the Prescott airport.

CTEC6As you know, if you are a regular reader of this Blog, Yavapai Community College offers Career and Technical Education training at CTEC, a state-of-the-art facility. It houses courses designed to confer certificates and AAS degrees in 12 different job-training areas. One of the newest tech ed offerings is the lineworkers program.

Unfortunately, all of the CTEC programs, including the lineworker program,  completely leave out high school students on the East side of the County while providing learning opportunities for high school students in the Prescott/Prescott Valley area. While both sides of the Mountain appear to point the finger of blame at each other, the real losers are high school students in Sedona and the Verde Valley who are victims of the County Community College bureaucracy, which has refused to effectively deal with the problem.

The fact that only high school students in the Prescott/Prescott Valley area have the opportunity to enroll in CTEC courses is, of course, completely unfair to the East side of the County. However,  no one is doing much about it. It is a condition that has existed for years without anyone coming forward for the children of the County.   Read More→

College backed tennis court opens October 13

YCC $1 million dollar investment in tennis courts  scheduled for opening October 13

Plans are moving ahead for an October 13th opening of the tennis complex that the College built in Prescott.  In a column in the Prescott Daily Courier, tennis professional Chris Howard describes the complex as “a prototype for others built across the country.” 

New tennis court on Prescott campus

According to Mr. Howard,  the “facility will boast an annual schedule of tournaments, Grand Prix events, USTA League Play (practices), Mixers, Intra-Club Matches, guest speakers, exhibitions, etc.”   

He also writes that “The programming will include playing groups for all levels of play during the weekday a.m./weekend hours and during evenings in the warmer months (with the high profile new lighting system) that can be accessed on the yc.edu/tenniscourts website.”

The Community College does not have a tennis team.  It has two courses with a potential enrollment of 30 students.

To read Mr. Howard’s column describing the new tennis courts, please click here and you will be taken to the Daily Courier website where the column is located. 

 

“Late” classes open for enrollment

You can still sign up for some “Late Start” courses; Prescott offerings dominate selection

OPEN COURSESYavapai Community College says you can still sign up for some “late start” classes. Classes range from career skills building to health, fitness and recreation. For example, there are courses on learning internet essentials and business communication as well as pilates, mindfulness meditation and cross-training.

Of the 39 “late start” face-to-face classes being offered, 18 are on the Prescott campus, 2 on the Verde, and 2 in Prescott Valley. There are also online classes being offered with 14 on the Prescott campus, 1 on the Verde campus and 1 on the Prescott Valley campus. Please click here to see the list of courses being offered.