Bill Blackwell, of Salinas, tees off at hole two of the Gavilan Golf Course in Gilroy.

By Christopher Quirk Staff Writer
Gilroy
– Gavilan College trustees may not be able to talk about it, but
college Superintendent Steve Kinsella said,

It’s no secret that the college has been considering alternate
uses for the golf course for several years now.

Gilroy – Gavilan College trustees may not be able to talk about it, but college Superintendent Steve Kinsella said, “It’s no secret that the college has been considering alternate uses for the golf course for several years now.”

The Board of Trustees has met in closed session on those alternate uses in each of its last 20 board meetings since August 2005, but is still months to years away from settling the golf course’s fate.

“There might be a resolution this calendar year,” said Tom Breen, president of Gavilan’s Board of Trustees, “but maybe not. The stuff that’s out of our control, well, it’s out of our control.”

The college is using Public/Private Ventures, an Oakland-based nonprofit that has also worked on the San Benito and Coyote Valley land acquisition projects, as a consultant to help it envision how to use the land and select a developer.

The most likely development projects, Kinsella said, are a residential facility for faculty and two for students, one of which would be reserved for adults older than 55. Kinsella said he could not divulge any specifics about the capacity of the housing facility or the cost of building it because such terms were under negotiation. Because the campus golf course lies on county land that has already been zoned for education facilities, the college will neither have to go through the city’s Residential Development Ordinance to acquire building permits nor get permission from the Local Agency Formation Commission to annex the land into the city.

Kinsella said the development would help students get housing at lower costs.

A key benefit, Kinsella said, is that the housing facility would bring in more revenue for the college than the approximately $30,000 the golf course earns each year. While the course hosts about 400 golfers a week, green fees are low for the area, ranging from $10 for a 9-hole weekday play in the afternoon to $23 for a weekend 18-hole tee time.

While golfers said they would lament the loss of an affordable course in a pastoral setting, students were generally in favor of a dormitory on campus.

“It would be pretty cool if I could afford my own place,” senior Ryan McBride said.

“I’m all for the dorms,” first-year student Genevieve Carlino said. “It’ll bring more life to all the events that happen.”

Dale Clark, professor of chemistry, was similarly supportive of the housing for faculty. When he started teaching, he commuted from Santa Clara because of trouble finding housing in Gilroy.

“At least that first year, you’d be close,” he said.

Other teachers worried about the added complexities housing would present, including adequate supervision in the dorms and effect on security campus-wide.

Christopher Quirk covers education for the Dispatch. Contact him at 427-7240 or [email protected].

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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