Coordinates: 45°35′28″N 121°11′20″W / 45.591°N 121.189°W / 45.591; -121.189

Columbia Gorge Community College

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Columbia Gorge Community College
The front of the main building
Former names
Treaty Oak
TypePublic community college
Established1977
PresidentKenneth Lawson[1]
Location, ,
United States

45°35′28″N 121°11′20″W / 45.591°N 121.189°W / 45.591; -121.189
CampusRural
Colors   Purple and White
NicknameFighting Salmon
MascotChinook
Websitewww.cgcc.edu

Columbia Gorge Community College is a public community college in The Dalles, Oregon, which is situated and surrounded by the Columbia Gorge National Scenic Area.

History

The college began in 1977 as the Wasco Area Education Service District, which not long after was changed to Treaty Oak Education Service District. The original incarnation of the college operated in leased facilities in downtown The Dalles for 16 years.

In 1989, a public vote changed the college's designation from a service district to a community college and later its name was changed to Columbia Gorge Community College. In 1993, a bond election allowed for the purchase and remodeling of the current campus facility, a former hospital.

In 2001, voters in Wasco County and Hood River County approved the annexation of Hood River County to the college's service district. The Hood River Center operated out of rented facilities near the waterfront in Hood River County. The college started the first wind technician training of any West Coast community college in 2006–07. This new program, established by Susan Wolff, was called Renewable Energy Technology. It was later transformed into Electro-Mechanical Technology, which continues today while retaining renewable energy as part of the curriculum.

In 2008, the college completed construction of its new campus in Hood River and a new Health Sciences Building on its campus in The Dalles.

In 2013, the college became independently accredited.

The college's founding president was William Bell, who led efforts to relocate the college to its new campus in 1994. The second president was Frank Toda, who led the 2001 annexation effort with board chair Mike Schend, as well as such initiatives as the new nursing program in 2001, a 2004 bond measure for the Hood River campus and The Dalles Campus improvements, Fort Dalles Readiness Center construction, and independent accreditation. From 2018-2023, Marta Yera-Cronin served as president of the college. In the fall of 2023, Cronin was succeeded by Kenneth Lawson, who was previously Vice President of Instruction at Skagit Valley College in Mt. Vernon, Washington.

The college announced in 2018 that it would be building a new skill center and student housing, which opened in fall term of 2021.[2] These projects were funded by the Oregon Legislature, City of The Dalles, Wasco County and the college itself (through a full faith and credit bond measure) without need for a local bond measure. The college added new programs including Construction Technology, Pre-Construction, and Advanced Manufacturing & Fabrication in September 2021 and Aviation maintenance technician training in 2022. The college has plans for other new programs including Agriculture Technology, and Fire Science in the near future.[3]

Campus

The Dalles Campus is located at 400 East Scenic Drive, next to Sorosis Park, overlooking the town. The campus consists of six main buildings and smaller buildings surrounding an outdoor amphitheater. CGCC is the closest community college to the Portland Metro area with on-campus student housing.

The Hood River Indian Creek Campus is located at 1730 College Way, next to Indian Creek in Hood River, with scenic views of Mt. Hood and Mt. Adams.[4]

Athletics

Starting in the fall of 2024, Mens and Woman's Cross Country Teams will be offered on campus as the schools first ever collegiate teams.[5] CGCC is a member of the NWAC conference.[6]

Accreditation

The college is accredited by the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities. Prior to being independently accredited, it was accredited through a contract with Portland Community College.

See also

References

  1. ^ "President's Office". Columbia Gorge Community College. 2024. Retrieved February 26, 2024.
  2. ^ Gibson, Mark (27 November 2018). "Skill center, housing project move forward". The Dalles Chronicle. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
  3. ^ https://www.mcedd.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/CGCC-Presentation-Skills-Center-Student-Housing-1.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ http://www.cgcc.edu/sites/cgcc.us/files/catalog/CGCC-Catalog-2014-15.pdf Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine Catalog, Columbia Gorge Community College. 2014. "Our Location and Facilities." Retrieved 2015-03-09.
  5. ^ News, Staff Report Columbia Gorge (2024-04-03). "Columbia Gorge Community College launches new athletics program with first Cross Country teams". Columbia Gorge News. Retrieved 2024-04-21. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  6. ^ "Athletics | Columbia Gorge Community College". www.cgcc.edu. Retrieved 2024-04-21.

External links