Santa Monica Mirror 2.11.22

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S A N TA M O N I C A

REFLECTING THE CONCERNS OF THE COMMUNITY smmirror.com

INSIDe MAIL THeFT SUSPeCTS APPReHeNDeD IN SANTA MONICA

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February 11 – February 17, 2022 Volume CXXVII, Issue 131

Santa Monica College Investigating Options to Build Housing for Poor and Unhoused Students Bundy campus eyed for potential project By Dolores Quintana Santa Monica College is considering building student housing for low-income and unhoused students. The proposed housing for low-income and unhoused students could be built next to the College’s Bundy campus on the border the city shares with Los Angeles as reported by The Santa Monica Lookout. SMC is conducting a feasibility study for a potential 275-bed housing unit that “would ideally [be] fully furnished with all utilities included.” in a parking lot near the edge of the campus. Funding for the project would come from matching funds in the current California budget reserved for housing grants for students in the California State University, University of California and California Community College educational systems. SMC has launched a survey to test the community’s support for a potential bond measure to fund this project, renovate a 50-year-old vocational building and refurbish the college’s nursing and healthcare instructional wings among other upgrades that the school has “real needs” said college officials as quoted byThe Santa Monica Lookout. Don Girard, SMC Vice President said, as

quoted by the Lookout, “We have a large number of students who are experiencing homelessness or threatened by it. After all, we are a community college: we are the affordable gateway to higher education. Lots of our students are single parents, foster kids and students who have to support themselves at a very young age. We have the opportunity to explore housing these vulnerable students on land we already own, just outside the city limits in LA. Of course we have to explore that.” 6,590 SMC students would qualify for this housing which is reserved for low income students who take a minimum of 12 units per semester and all of those units have to qualify as applicable to a degree. Students who are accepted into the housing program would live there for a full academic year, as long as they continue to take classes. To extend their stay past their first year, students would be required to “”demonstrate compliance with the minimum average unit enrollment requirements.” as quoted by The Santa Monica Lookout. Additionally, “If the College deems a student to demonstrate an exceptional circumstance, SMC is committed to negotiating and/or reducing the minimum credit load requirement temporarily.” The feasibility study would start in March and be paid for by a $60,000 grant from the state of California according to the Santa Monica Lookout quoting a memo sent by

The SMC Bundu campus.

SMC President Kathryn E. Jeffrey. The memo, sent on Oct. 27, 2021, also states “If the proposed planning grant is approved and a student housing project is determined to be feasible and financially viable, the next steps for SMC will be to determine a size and site location for the proposed student housing facility.” The grant proposal proposes “an underused parking lot which accounts for most of a 10.4-acre satellite campus” as the future site of the housing program. Should the study find

Photo: Sam Catanzaro

the project “feasible” Jeffrey’s memo adds that SMC requests additional funding in the amount of $2.47 million “to complete other planning activities prior to construction.” If the project gets the green light, it would still take roughly 14 months to design the housing structures and another 20 to 24 months for construction. Jeffrey’s memo, as quoted by the Santa Monica Outlook said that would end up “resulting in building occupancy by the first quarter of the 2027 calendar year.”

Part 1 Crime Down in Santa Monica While Arson and Other Categories See Rise Santa Monica police release annual report By Dolores Quintana

The official SMPD report on crime statistics for 2021 has revealed a 2.9 percent reduction in Part One offenses. The report is an overview of calls for police service and arrest reports for Part One offenses, some of the most serious crimes, which are Aggravated Assault, Arson, Burglary, Grand Theft Auto, Homicide, Larceny, Rape and Robbery. The report does note that the last two years have been an “anomaly” due to the events that have taken place during that time namely the “unrest of 2020 and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic”. The criminal analysts of the SMPD reviewed the information along with the historical data to provide their analysis and the report does point out that this is a preliminary report which

might change. The report shows the record of the total crimes in Santa Monica for a period of five years from 2017 to 2021: 2017: 5009 • 2018: 5,441 2019: 4,601 • 2020: 4,377 2021: 4,248 The report notes, right off the bat, that the arrest rate has dropped significantly and that the decline can be attributed to pandemic stayat-home orders and the attempts to minimize contact between people during the pandemic. The arrest statistics are listed by year as well: 2017: 3,292 • 2018: 3,774 2019: 3,840 • 2020: 1,538 2021: 1,559 The crime of rape has had a notable decrease over the five-year period. The crime went from a high of 55 in 2017 to 49 in 2018 to 35 in 2019 with a small increase in 2020 to 37 and a

Crime Report, see page 11

Photo: Sam Catanzaro


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