President Diana Z. Rodriguez to Become SBCCD’s 16th Chancellor
The San Bernardino Community College District (SBCCD) Board of Trustees announced the
appointment of San Bernardino Valley College President Diana Z. Rodriguez as the district’s
15th Chancellor. Rodriguez will lead the mission of a system that serves 20,000 students
through Crafton Hills College, San Bernardino Valley College, a workforce training
facility, and KVCR TV/FM. Rodriguez is poised to become the only Latina chancellor
of a community college district in Southern California upon assuming office in August.
Rodriguez has a long and distinguished career spanning more than 30 years working
in higher education as a faculty member and administrator. Before leading San Bernardino
Valley College, she served as Vice President of Student Services and Interim Vice
President of Academic Services at Las Positas College, and Vice President of Student
Services at Palo Verde College.
She will assume her new duties as Chancellor of the San Bernardino Community College
District on August 1, when campuses return to expanded in-person learning and working.
The current interim Chancellor, Jose F. Torres, will return to his position as the
Executive Vice Chancellor for the district.
On June 2, the district will have a virtual meet and greet with Chancellor-designate
Rodriguez open to the community and streamed on the district's social media channels. As
the chief executive officer, Rodriguez will manage a budget of $200 million and 1,000
faculty and staff members. She is known for increasing student enrollment, advocating
for institutional innovation, and supporting professional development.
“Serving as the next chancellor is the honor of a lifetime,” Rodriguez said of her
new role. “My passion for this work comes from my own story. As I walk across our
district and our campuses, I see myself in our students. I am second-generation Mexican-American,
first in my family to go to college, and a very proud community college graduate,”
she said. Rodriguez graduated from Palo Verde College, earned three degrees from California
State University, San Bernardino in marketing, a master’s degree in business administration,
and another master’s degree in education. She is a doctoral candidate in Higher Educational
Leadership at Northcentral University.
Dr. Anne Viricel, chair of the SBCCD Board of Trustees, said the decision to hire
Rodriguez will shape the district’s future, which is one of the area’s largest employers
and an economic engine for the Inland area.
“We have seen her excellence at San Bernardino Valley College, and she has proven
herself the right leader at the right time,” Viricel said. She said Rodriguez, who
has led SBVC since 2016, has experience at two-year and four-year institutions, from
classified staff to a faculty member to administrative leader.
The board conducted a national search, asking the top finalists to create a vision
for the college district and explain their leadership philosophy.
Rodriguez worked with K-12 schools and community partners to start student-focused
programs such as the GenerationGo! internship program, the Valley360 Resource Center
food pantry, the Workforce Readiness Program, and the annual SBVC Day of Service.
In leadership, Rodriguez describes her philosophy as planning the strategy, measuring
success, and advocating for the needed resources.
“I’m kind of geeky, so I like this stuff,” she said after talking about the metrics
of success, including educational strategies faculty and staff spearheaded to earn
SBVC the highest level of accreditation this year from the Accrediting Commission
for Community and Junior Colleges.
“I’m continuously mapping our documents and the progress we’re making on each of them,”
Rodriguez said. “But let’s think about it this way. What if we dream big. Let’s shout
our dreams big about who we want to be and how we want to get there.”
She said the immediate goal is to return from the pandemic in a safe, steady, and
sustainable way. She wants to expand campus offerings so that students and faculty
continue to have choices about in-person or online learning. The district is approaching
a celebration of 100 years since its founding in 1926, and she said she looked forward
to involving the community and industry partners in planning the success of the next
decade.
Her accomplishments have also included creating equity-centered initiatives on her
campus to ensure that San Bernardino Valley College hires diverse staff and faculty
and increases college enrollment among local Black and Latino high school graduates.
Her accomplishments have drawn several awards, including the 2018 Woman of the Year
Award for the 47th Assembly District of California. Before ImageAfter Image