"Town and gown" coming together offers potential
for Cranbrook
By Michael J Morris
As Jake McInnis was stepping
down after 11 years as president of East Kootenay Community College, now College
of the Rockies in 1993, I chatted with him about the possibility of Cranbrook
becoming a college town.
At the time I was a faculty
member at the college and editor of Insider, a faculty magazine. In the
interests of full disclosure in writing about the college, I became the first
elected faculty member of the college board of governors, and took early
retirement in 2000.
The college was first
established in Cranbrook in 1975 but in the beginning classes were held in
various buildings mostly in the downtown area. the college web site says it
operated from 17 different locations but by 1982 the Cranbrook campus was
opened. It also had a presence in other communities.
He arrived from Vancouver
Community College as the present campus was being completed.
During our conversation,
Jake, as we all called him, referring to it as an "incredible benefit" to the
entire region, and that the potential was "incredible" not only for the benefit
it provided to students but as an industry, providing jobs.
As one who went to university in Waterloo, Ontario
just as the two universities there, University of Waterloo and Waterloo Lutheran
University (now Wilfrid Laurier University) were in their formative stages, I
was able to witness the beginnings of a Canadian college town. Over the years
beginning about 1960, it's been most beneficial to Kitchener-Waterloo to become
a college (university) town.
In my four years in Waterloo businesses sprung up
simply to serve the university community. It has continued.
Over the years, just as I generally love downtowns, I
have added campuses and college towns to my list and at the risk of angering all
my British Columbia readers, my favourite campus is the University of Toronto
where one can wander about, ending up at Queens Park, University Avenue and
into the heart of downtown Toronto. I spent hours exploring the "neighbourhood"
when I attended U of T -- and yes I have roamed about the University of British
Columbia campus too.
So I welcomed the opportunity to ask Jake about the
possibility of Cranbrook as a college town.
His reply: "I actually think of the concept of
Cranbrook as a college town. It is quite conceivable that it will become one - a
Canadian college town." He was making the point that college towns are much more
common in the United States.
"The college could eventually become the principal
employer in Cranbrook. It is an ecologically, socially and economically sound
industry."
Well, Jake retired, 20 years have now passed, and
Cranbrook is no closer in the "college town" sense of the word to becoming one
than when we had our chat for the Insider article. A college town becomes
the centre - socially, economically, culturally - with spin offs into all
aspects of community life.
But, another comment Jake made has come true. "The
college is an important and valuable resource throughout the region. We've won.
We're on track. We look like a college. We act and behave like a college. We are
known and understood as a college."
A look at the College of the Rockies web site tells
part of the story, at least in terms of its economic importance. It says;
"From 543 students at five campuses in
1975, the 2011/12 academic year saw the enrolment of 2,282 full-time equivalent
students at seven campuses. These included: 1,769 in University Studies,
Business, Career/Technical and Vocational programs; and 513 in Trades and
Apprenticeships. There are approximately 8,000 part-time Continuing Education
registrants as well. International Education student enrolment has also grown to
include 137 international students from 30 countries. From
24 employees and a $1.2 million annual budget in 1975, in 2011 COTR had 247
full-time, part-time and seasonal employees and 626 non-regular employees and a
$33 million annual budget. It
serves a regional population of 85,000 over a 45,000 square kilometre area
..."
And that may be just fine as
far as Cranbrook goes. In large measure, the college sits on the outskirts in
town, known best to those who have some direct connection to it as students,
employees or those who may periodically visit for some function being held
there.
That's
important of course. But Jake saw so much more potential, and sadly 20 years
have passed, and in many ways, COTR is still a stranger in a strange land, of,
but not really an integrated part of the community in which its main campus is
located.
Let
me share one interesting deleopment on college towns from an article on college
towns from Wikipedia: "...notable
development since the 1990s
is the surge in popularity of retirees relocating to college towns. Retirees are
attracted to these locations because of cultural
and educational opportunities, college athletic events,
good medical facilities (often at teaching
hospitals affiliated
with medical schools),
a low cost
of living,
and often a pedestrian-
or public transit-friendly
development pattern. Several development companies now specialize in
constructing retirement
communities in
college towns. In some cases the communities have developed formal relationships
with the local institution."
Maybe, just maybe, it is time for "town and gown" to
come together to maximize the potential of each to make Cranbrook a more vibrant
place for everyone.
My email is mj.morris@live.ca
Full disclosure: I am not now and never have
been a member of the Citizens for a Livable Cranbrook Society; however, I did
conduct a workshop for its members for which I was paid.
How about a new satellite campus, for the Dept. of Continuing Studies, using the used space in the mall, and/or building new on the SuperValu land?
ReplyDeleteEither location would work. I am reminded of the success of the downtown Vancouver campus of Simon Fraser University.
ReplyDelete