Allan Hancock College was not among the 15 colleges selected on Jan. 20 by the California Community College Board of Governors to begin pilot programs offering bachelorās degrees to students.
āI canāt say weāre not disappointed,ā Hancock Superintendent/President Kevin Walthers said in a statement shortly after the official word came out. āThe selected degrees represent the ability of the community college system to create more opportunity and increase access for students to complete their education.ā
At the end of 2014, Hancock applied to offer a bachelorās degree in applied viticultureāthe study of grapes to make wineāwith an emphasis on climate change, water management, and sustainability.
āThey are all important topics for the agricultural community,ā Walthers said.
The application process was faculty-driven, Walters said. Among those responsible for drafting the application were academic dean Paul Murphy; agribusiness instructor Eric Shiers; and Alfredo Koch, a professor in viticulture at Hancock.
Koch said he wasnāt given much time to draft the application but gave it his best shot and wrote it as if the college were going to be selected. He doesnāt believe the rush had anything to do with not being selected.
āThere was not much time, maybe less than a month,ā Koch said. āBut we started to work as soon as we learned that we had a chance.ā
There are similar programs in the area, such as at Cal Poly, but Koch said Hancockās program would have differed in the sense that it was more applied.
āWe feel that itās something really useful, and that can be great for our industry to train more students in sustainability,ā Koch said.
Koch added that there is a possibility the college could re-apply sometime in the future. In the meantime, Walthers said that the college will continue to explore partnerships with other universities, such as Cal Poly.
The closest community college selected to pursue a pilot program is Bakersfield College, which will offer a bachelorās degree in industrial automation.
Senate Bill 850, passed last September, made the pilot program possible. The law is designed to meet the stateās demand for technical job fields and enables up to 15 community colleges to have bachelorās degree programs that are unavailable in either of Californiaās university systems.
āSomething needs to be done to serve the students in a community of this size because there is no accessible place for our students to receive a four-year degree,ā Walthers said.
This article appears in Jan 29 – Feb 5, 2015.

