Administration says expenditure will fund a 14,000 square foot commercial lab facility focusing on Brewing and Distilling beer; communication on project to public and Board EXTREMELY poor at best; Third District Rep strongly prefers funds be used for a second CTE facility to train Valley residents and students for hi-tech, well-paying jobs but is ignored
Nothing is clear in the 2022-2023 Community College capital budget, approved by the Yavapai Community College District Governing Board 4-1, when it comes to expending almost $10 million on building a beer brewing commercial lab facility in the Verde Valley. Despite the almost total lack of information, the budget containing this expenditure was approved with one dissent at the May 17 District Governing Board meeting.
All that is definitely known is that the facility will be located somewhere in the Verde Valley. (See Budget Exhibit 12 below showing expenditure as approved.) (See also video clips of presentation and discussion by clicking here.)
The only information during the Board meeting regarding this facility and its purpose came when Third District Representative Paul Chevalier tried to obtain some details from College Vice President Clint Ewell. Ewell said, in part, in response to Mr. Chevalier’s questions that “our preliminary estimates are about 14,000 square feet to build a commercial lab facility to teach brewing and distilling.” (See video clip by clicking here.) He indicated that the College will most likely then be selling beer in addition to wine. “That’s why we’re going with the larger commercial (site or size),” said Ewell.
The focus in the budget on a major beer facility came as a surprise to Board members who in March 2022 were presented with a draft capital budget. In that budget the College focus clearly appeared to be on expanding the current Verde Valley Skills Center by an expenditure of almost $10 million over a three-year period.
There had been some reference to expanding the current beer and distillery program at the March Board meeting in the consultants written and oral reports to the public. But no one thought that the mere suggestion to expand this program would evolve into a major $10 million project. Or, that it would be presented to the District Governing Board without data showing a serious need, future potential high paying job openings after training, a development outline plus an open discussion by the Board about the pros and cons of such a facility.
Chevalier argued at Tuesday’s meeting that the Community College should focus on providing hi-tech Career and Technical Education training rather than expending millions on programs about how to make beer. He said that he didn’t believe that using ten million to teach persons brewing skills could favorably compare with teaching them hi-tech jobs with certificates and degrees where starting salaries were reported at $75,000 or more.
He suggested that a small portion of the $10 million be used to develop a joint program with a local brewery with the remainder going into developing hi-tech jobs. He observed that in his discussions with the public in his district, he had not heard an outcry for teaching how to brew beer. Rather, his constituents wanted hi-tech career and technical education certificates and degrees.
Chevalier also said he agreed with the remainder of the budget submitted to the Board. However, he would not approve it with the millions aimed at building a brewing training facility in the Verde Valley. If it was removed, he would vote “yes.” Otherwise, his vote was “no.”
The remaining four Governing Board members appeared reluctant to ask any questions about the project or consider removing the expenditure from the 2022-2023 budget. Representative Ray Sigafoos seemed to lament he had not heard the pros and cons of the project while representative Mitch Padilla said that he was not opposed to the program starting. Chair Deb McCasland said she thought it was “shortsighted” to hold up approval of the budget because of opposition to the brewery expenditure.
Video clips of the comments by Governing Board members can be viewed by clicking here. You may view the entire District Governing B0ard meeting when it is posted with the minutes on the Yavapai Community College District Governing Board website.

Yavapai Community College will be training the next generation of dispatchers at their first Public Safety Dispatcher Academy, June 6-17 at the Northern Arizona Regional Training Academy (NARTA). The training will take place on Yavapai Community College’s Prescott Campus.
Yavapai Community College will hold a special Career and Technical Education recruitment program on the Verde Valley Campus April 30. It will feature an opportunity for prospective students to sign up for as many as three 30-minute sessions in CTE training offered on campus. Prospective students can experience different programs and take a class that may help them decide whether to seek a CTE future that could lead to a career in two years or less.
Cottonwood Community School eighth graders who completed a basic career and technical education carpentry and plumbing program at Yavapai Community College’s Verde Valley Campus celebrated their newly obtained skills by constructing a doghouse. The doghouse is described as custom-made, 2-by-4-feet, insulated and taupe-colored.
Classes being offered for spring 2022 semester at the Career and Technical Education Center on the Verde Valley campus are already full or filling. Basic Carpentry II and Basic Residential Plumbing courses were filled almost as soon as the Community College published the list of available courses being offered in the spring 2022 session. The Basic Residential Plumbing course has only three seats left.
In a July 29 news release, Yavapai Community College announced that it was offering several free tuition classes at its Career and Technical Education Center (CTEC), which is located at the Prescott airport. The surprise announcement came at a time when the Community College had been heavily marketing fee tuition trade skills classes only on its Verde Campus at its brand new Trade Skills Training Center. The College’s fall brochures had highlighted several free tuition classes offered at its Trade Skills Training Center facility on the Verde Campus with no mention or suggestion of similar free classes being offered at CTEC.
Yavapai Community College will have an in-Person Open House at the Verde Valley Campus in Clarkdale on Saturday, August 7, 2021, from 10 a.m. to noon.
Yavapai Community College has begun developing a Career and Technical Education trades training program in newly constructed CTE building cautiously. It is, as one might expect, a first-year, first-time work in progress.




