MiraCosta College’s new Veterans Information Center is more than twice as big as the existing center, which became increasingly cramped as student veteran enrollment grew.
Since 2007, the number of veterans taking courses at MiraCosta has grown from about 1,000 to 1,500, with another 800 family members also signing up for classes.
At this point, almost 10 percent of the students on campus are either veterans or family members of veterans.
The new Veterans Information Center has a computer lab, several individual offices for counseling, plus a social area.
Former Marine Kevin Sandoval, a peer advisor, spoke at the ribbon cutting ceremony
“The renovation of this building next to me is more than a place for veterans to congregate," he said. “This site will provide a place for veterans to lay their worries and raise their ideas. It’s going to provide a place for veterans to remember their friends and create new ones.“
The cost of moving the center to larger quarters was born by the college. Plans to build a completely new building were scuttled when voters failed to pass MiraCosta’s bond measure in 2012.
After cutting a ribbon to the new center, the veterans used a sabre to cut a cake, in celebration of the Marine Corps’ 239th birthday, Nov. 10.