Temecula vies to be CSUSM satellite site

By: NICOLE SACK - Staff Writer | Thursday, September 27, 2007 10:11 PM PDT

TEMECULA ---- What is expected to be a long journey to bring a California State University campus to Temecula began this week with city leaders sitting down with Cal State San Marcos officials.

Temecula is hoping to duplicate the success of Cal State San Marcos, which had its beginnings as an extension campus of San Diego State. Founded in 1989, it is one of the 23 campuses in the California State University system.

Temecula Mayor Chuck Washington and Councilman Mike Naggar, along with two assistant city managers and the city's economic development director, met Monday with Cal State San Marcos President Karen Haynes and school Provost Emily Cutrer and other school officials, to see if Temecula could become home to a satellite campus for the 18-year-old university.

"It was a very productive meeting. We heard some very positive things, but nothing definitive," Naggar said. "In fact, there are lots and lots of obstacles. But obstacles can be overcome. To make it happen this is going to take not just this council, but the entire community and a lot of philanthropy. But we have taken the first step."

CSUSM spokeswoman Kaine Thompson said the university has seen tremendous growth in recent years in the number of students from Riverside County that it serves. Nearly 1,200 of the campus's 9,176 students come from north of the county line, she said, up 9 percent from the previous school year.

"Cal State San Marcos is very aware of the growing need and interest in the Temecula area," Thompson said. "But these discussions are very preliminary at this point."

Washington said it was suggested by university officials that a campus in Temecula would need to offer at least three degree programs and have to be able to draw from 300 to 500 students to attend classes there.

"At the end of the of the day, there was an acknowledgement that this is an area of growing demand, a significant area and one that is in (the Cal State San Marcos) coverage area," Washington said.

The benefits of such a school would go beyond higher education, Washington said. It also would serve as a motivator for students in Temecula and the surrounding region to keep reaching for a college degree. Higher education was also a topic that has intertwined itself with economic development strategies being developed for the city of Temecula.

"When we looked at the larger picture of what we want this city to be in 20 years, 'quality of life' continued to be the underlying theme," he said. "For us to be a successful, viable, sustainable community, we need higher education."

For nearly four years, the city worked with a private developer to build a higher education center that would have been used by multiple schools to provide night classes and college courses for local residents. But in March, the project died when the developer was unable to secure leases and financing and meet the city's requirements for the land transfer. The city still owns the land.

However, city officials said in August that they would shift their focus to courting a single college, although not at that site.

As far as where such a campus could be located, Washington said there is land near Old Town as well as areas near the city's borders that could be purchased for the endeavor.

The 32-acre site on Diaz Road and Dendy Parkway once slated to be the site of the education center may be off the table as a location for the envisioned satellite campus. The city has solicited proposals for the former education center site and is currently considering another development for there, but can't disclose the details yet.

Washington said the next step in the quest of a satellite campus of Cal State San Marcos in Temecula would be to engage the community leaders, such as residents and businesses, to create a university foundation.

"If we bring enough people together, determine what we need to do and then roll up our selves ---- we can start the work to make this a reality," Washington said. "If we dream big enough, it will happen. We are only limited by our failure to dream big enough."

Contact staff writer Nicole Sack at (951) 676-4315, Ext. 2616, or nsack@californian.com.

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Stevo wrote on Sep 28, 2007 7:26 AM:I hope the city of Temecula does something about access routes to this alleged campus before they build it not think about it after. Wildomar, Murrieta or Menifee would be better since there is room for freeway access improvement.-

Concerned-1 wrote on Sep 28, 2007 8:18 AM:Ten years ago, I would have been jumping for joy about bringing a CSU campus to the Valley. Today, however, I've had enough of what CSU is trying to sell as education. From the beginning, CSUSM alienated non-minority students at orientation. They pushed a politically correct agenda to the point of disbelief. It seems the CSUSM model has left education behind in pursuit of a new world order.-

Jake wrote on Sep 28, 2007 8:37 AM:No, Temecula is THE place locally to build it. If Murrieta, Wildomar or Menifee want it, let them vie for it. This would be a HUGE win for Temecula, and continue our well planned, well established path into being even more of the hub of SW Riverside county. Once again, Temecula takes the intiative, while Murrieta has RM holding it back.-

to concerned-1 wrote on Sep 28, 2007 10:29 AM:sounds like you had a bad experience... As a non-minority student at CSUSM, i have nothing but good things to say about the campus and it's teachings.

build a campus wrote on Sep 28, 2007 12:15 PM:I am all for bringing a CSU campus to Temecula as it will only benefit the community. Naysayers will complain about increased traffic, crime, etc. but in the end a local public (and recognized) university will bring higher paying jobs, a more educated workforce, new employers, ancillary businesses, and something that the community can be proud of. CSUSM is not the only university that started as a branch campus and grew beyond the original expectations. Look at the University of Virginia and its former northern branch campus "George Mason University" which is now a premier school for Public Policy and Administration plus a major law school in the metro Washington D.C. area. GMU was only founded in 1957 (branch campus status) and it has grown considerably since becoming a full university in 1972. The areas immediately surrounding GMU are now among the most wealthy in the U.S. and are home to many of the nation's defense and government contracting shops. If Temecula builds a campus...the students will start coming and we'll start building a "real" economy instead of an "artificial" one based primarily on real estate and retail.

Concerned-1 wrote on Sep 28, 2007 3:03 PM:To To Concerned at 10:29. I apologize for being critical, but if your spelling and punctuation are an example of the "teachings" from CSUSM I'm afraid you've proven my point. I'm sure, however, you're well versed in political correctness.

GoForIt wrote on Sep 28, 2007 3:27 PM:Thank you Temecula for taking initiative. Higher education would bring more companies like Abbot, PHS, and International Rectifier to the area. Brains = Gains=

Modern wrote on Sep 28, 2007 8:36 PM:Forget that. Let all be investors and start our own private college. South-West University of Riverside. We don't need the Cal State system.

AWESOME!! wrote on Sep 28, 2007 9:29 PM:Temecula city councilmembers will be heros for bringing a California State University here to Temecula. This is absolutely FANTASTIC. I want to get my masters degree and hoping to eliminate the commute. Plenty of housing in Temecula for students. GREAT news.... Forget all negativity and MAKE IT HAPPEN!!!!

Poor Jake wrote on Oct 1, 2007 8:03 AM:What an ego you have. Where does it say CSU is coming to Temecula? It doesn't. Mikey said it best: "...it'll take a lot of philanthropy." In case you're not smart enough, that means MONEY. Why build brick and mortar collegs when you can take them online? University of Phoenix offers them. It's in Murrieta, Jake. Maybe you're not bright enough to find it.-

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