Salt Lake Community College,
often abbreviated SLCC and referred to locally as
"Slick", is the largest two-year community college in Utah
.
Over
24,000 students attend classes at one of SLCC's three campuses or
eleven branches throughout Salt Lake County
, and parts of Tooele County
, Utah
, including a
fast growing Virtual Campus.
Although the college does not offer four-year degrees, school
officials work with the state's other institutions of high learning
to ensure that credits are transferable.
General education
credits may be transferred to any four-year school in Utah
including private schools such as
Westminster College
and Brigham Young University
.
SLCC has open enrollment and serves the local community, with
approximately 95% of the student body considered Utah residents. Of
the enrolled student body, two-thirds aspire to eventually obtain
four-year degrees.
History
Salt Lake Community College began teaching classes
September 14,
1948 as the
Salt Lake Area Vocational School. A product of the
GI Bill, the school evolved out
of the War Production Training School established at
West High
School during the war. After most federal support dried up in
1946, the
Salt Lake City
School District continued funding the program on its own, which
was a burden for the district. The district, with the State Board
of Vocational Education, the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, the
local
American Legion, and
Veterans of Foreign Wars
successfully lobbied the state legislature to create
state-supported vocational schools. On
March
19,
1947 money was appropriated for
establishing vocational schools in all school districts serving
populations of at least 140,000.
The Salt Lake City School Board selected long-time vocational
teacher Howard Gunderson as the schools first president.
The old
Troy Laundry Building on 461 South 600 East in Salt Lake
City
was selected as the school's first building, and
equipment was donated from Salt Lake area High Schools which had
house War Production Training Schools during the war.
Gunderson received authorization from the Salt Lake City, Park
City, and Tooele School districts to teach 39 vocational programs,
although teachers could not be found for all of them
immediately.
Newspaper ads for the school carried the slogan, "Learn to Earn",
which would be used into the 1970s. In its first quarter, tuition
for the school was $78 annually, and 246 students registered in 14
classes. By the following quarter, 948 students were enrolled
including 589 veterans.
In 1949
J. Bracken Lee became governor of Utah. A fiscal
conservative, he opposed the Area Vocational School as duplicating
services available elsewhere. When the legislature presented the
1949–1950 budget with expenses projected to exceed revenues by $2
million, Lee used
line-item vetos to
cut the entire $500,000 appropriated to the school. Lee's veto drew
criticism from
The Salt Lake
Tribune, labor unions, and veteran's organizations, but
the supporters of the cut stood firm, citing the alleged
wastefulness of the school. Only by scaling back operations to
$145,000 annually was Gunderson able to keep the school open.
The second President of the school, Jay Nielson (1949–1978),
referred to the first years of Lee's governorship as "the
starvation years". No state funding was provided to the school
again until 1951 when it began receiving modest subsidies, and a
$312,000 grant to purchase the Troy Laundry Building it was
in.
Initially the school was seen as a central location for high school
vocational education, and the
school was thus an extension of public
secondary education. The school was
guided jointly under the direction of the state and local school
board until 1959 when it changed its name to
Salt Lake
Trade Technical Institute, reflecting the more
adult-oriented nature of the school. Governance for the school also
moved solely into the state's hands under the State Board for
Vocational Education.
In 1967 most departments of the school (now renamed
Utah
Technical College at Salt Lake) moved to the current
location at 4600 S.
Redwood Road in what is now Taylorsville
. The state legislature granted money for
expansion at the Taylorsville Redwood
campus,
which is now the primary campus of SLCC. A thriving vocational
program existed at the original site well in to the 1980s that
served 1000's of students seeking basic education and occupational
skills.
In 1969 the State unified the scattered public higher education
direction into the State Board of Higher Education (later called
the Board of Regents). However, the Technical College was not
placed entirely under this board. Instead, it was jointly governed
by the State Board of Higher Education and the State Board of
Vocational Education. Turf wars between the boards erupted almost
immediately in 1970 and again in 1974 when the boards fought over
who had authority to raise salaries (it was decided that the
vocational board controlled wages, but that the higher education
board dictated budgets). The Board of Higher Education first sought
to convert the schools into
community
colleges in 1970, which the vocational board outright rejected.
The Vocational Board eventually relinquished control of the school
in 1978 with an agreement that technical school maintain 75%
vocational training, which was state law at the time. President Jay
L.
Nelson
believed this was necessary to prevent the school from becoming
merely a feeder for the University of Utah
. However, in 1987 the school formally became
Salt Lake Community College and the old requirement 75% for
vocational training ended.
Programs
SLCC offers more than 100 degree programs in academic, technical,
and vocational fields. It is accredited by the Northwest
Association of Schools and Colleges, and many credits are
transferable to all of the state's four-year colleges.
More SLCC graduates
attend the University of
Utah
than graduates of any other institution of high
learning.
Campuses
The Taylorsville Redwood Campus (1967)
Located at 4600 S.
Redwood Road in Taylorsville
, the Taylorsville Redwood Campus
is considered the college's primary campus. Serving over
15,000 students a year, the campus is spread across two city blocks
and is home to twelve academic buildings. Taylorsville Redwood
contains a library (approx 90,000 volumes), several athletic
facilities, an amphitheater, and a student union.
Anime Banzai, Utah's only
anime convention and the largest fan convention in
Utah, is held annually in October on the Taylorsville Redwood
campus. Also, the
Rocky Mountain Revue, a pre-season
basketball tournament sponsored by the
NBA's
Utah Jazz, is held every year in the
Lifetime Activities Center.
South City (1992)

East Entrance of South City
Campus

West Entrance of South City
Campus
Located at 1575 S.
State Street in Salt Lake
City
, the South City Campus occupies
the former home of South High School
. This campus serves over 6,000 students in
nearly 100 classrooms. Additionally, the campus houses a swimming
pool, labs, and the Grand Theatre
[110513], home of the Grand Theatre Foundation and
Community Institute, which sponsors many community events.
Jordan Campus (2001)

Salt Lake Community College Jordan
Student Center Building
Located
at 3491 West 9000 South in West Jordan
, the Jordan Campus is SLCC's third
full-service campus. It houses a library, food court,
financial aid, a dental clinic for the dental hygienist program,
academic advising offices and Cate Field where the SLCC Baseball
team plays its home games.
College plans call for the Jordan Campus to become the largest and
main campus by 2020. The nursing program opened at the campus by
2007 in a new five-story Health Science building. A
UTA TRAX station will eventually be constructed
across the street for the college. Other non-college buildings on
the campus include the
Jordan
School District applied technology center, Iteneris Charter
School built by
Bill Gates, and a
LDS
Institute of
Religion.
Additional Programs & Services
Notes
Sources
- Randa, Ernest W. Salt Lake Community College: A College on
the Move 1949-1998. Agreka Books. ISBN 1-888106-46-8
- [110514] Salt Lake Community College's Thayne Center
for Service & Learning Website
External links