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Portland Community College. Largest postsecondary institution in the State of Oregon87,000 students (26,400 FTE)1,500 square mile district (size of Rhode Island)Includes part or all of 5 counties and 13 school districtsMix of urban, suburban, and rural populationsMany workforce programs at capa
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1. Winning Bond Elections During Bad Economic Times ACCT Convention
October 8, 2009
San Francisco, CA
Denise Frisbee, Trustee, Portland Community College, OR
Dr. Preston Pulliams, President, PCC, OR
Kristin Watkins, Assoc. VP College Advancement, PCC, OR
2. Portland Community College Largest postsecondary institution in the State of Oregon
87,000 students (26,400 FTE)
1,500 square mile district (size of Rhode Island)
Includes part or all of 5 counties and 13 school districts
Mix of urban, suburban, and rural populations
Many workforce programs at capacity; outdated equipment; enrollment increasing and students on waiting lists
Last bond measure passed in 2000 (took 3 attempts)
3. PCC Bond Measure The Cost: $374 Million
32.9 cents per $1,000 assessed value
< $8/month for house assessed at $280,000
The largest educational bond measure in the state’s history
The Goal:
Expand workforce training, update equipment/
technology, serve more students at 3 campuses and 1 major center
Build/open 3 new education and training centers
Make health/safety/energy efficient upgrades at 6 existing campus/center locations
4. The Timeline: Getting out Early 2005-2007 Bond program planning
March 2007 Consultant on board
Sept 2007 First poll, shows 59% support initially, 65% after hearing arguments
Oct 2007 Board votes to direct the College to prepare a bond measure
Jan 2008 Campaign staff on board
Mar 2008 Board votes to refer bond to the ballot
5. The Timeline: Economy in Decline Sept 2008 Second poll, 52% initial support, 57% after poll
Sept 7 US takes over Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac
Sept 14 Bank of America takes over Merrill Lynch
Sept 16 Federal reserve loan to AIG
Sept 21 Bailout talks begin
Sept 29 S&P has worst day since 1987
Oct 2008 Congress passes bailout plan
Nov 2008 The election – Passes with 53% of the vote!
6. Preparing for Success Laying the Groundwork: 2 to 3 years before
Building Community Support the election
Assessing Viability: 12 to 18 months out
Testing your Messages
Running the Campaign: 9 to 12 months out
Demonstrating a Compelling Need
7. Laying the Groundwork Role of the Board of Directors:
Make getting out in the community a priority for your President (from the hiring process to annual evaluation)
Get out in the community yourself
8. Laying the Groundwork Role of the College President:
Increase your visibility in the community, especially with business
Identify potential vulnerabilities and address them now
Build internal awareness about the need for a bond
Develop a strong bond plan and provide opportunities for internal involvement
9. Laying the Groundwork Role of the College Advancement Office:
Develop methods to communicate with voters if you don’t already
Remind voters of the accomplishments of your last bond measure
Start setting up the need for a bond measure in your communications
Expand your College Foundation’s vision to include funding beyond scholarships
10. Assessing Viability Role of the Board of Directors:
Conduct frequent check-ins on bond planning, costs, polling
Build a sense of Board responsibility and commitment
11. Assessing Viability Role of the College President:
Invite both the external and internal community in to hear the challenges you are facing
Secure the support, or at least “non-opposition”, of your key union/employee/student groups
Meet with business, government leaders to vet their support
Hire a campaign consultant
12. Assessing Viability Role of the College Advancement Office:
Hire a polling firm to test your issues/bond program components
Arrange (internal and external) community presentations
Keep setting up the need for a bond measure in your communications
Offer the public opportunities to provide feedback
Start talking with your Foundation about support
13. Running the Campaign Role of the Board of Directors:
At least one trustee must be a champion
Everyone must be unanimously supportive in public
Represent the college at community meetings, fundraisers, editorial boards
Make a financial contribution to the campaign
14. Running the Campaign Role of the College President:
Make the bond the top priority for your time
Raise money for the campaign, most will come from business
Loop back to all your internal constituents (meetings, emails, presentations)
Present before all your major business/community associations and some of the minor ones too