| Motto | Dream. Flourish. Succeed. |
|---|---|
| Type | Publiccommunity college |
| Established | 1953; 73 years ago (1953) |
Parent institution | Peralta Community College District andCalifornia Community Colleges |
| Chancellor | Tammeil Gilkerson |
| President | Rebecca Opsata |
Academic staff | 400+ |
| Students | 16,543[1] |
| Location | , California ,United States 37°47′47″N122°15′46″W / 37.79637°N 122.26280°W /37.79637; -122.26280 |
| Campus | Urban: 60 acres (0.24 km²) |
| Colors | Forest green and silver |
| Nickname | Eagles |
| Mascot | Eddie the Eagle |
| Website | laney |
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Laney College is apubliccommunity college inOakland, California, United States.[2] Laney is the largest of the four colleges of thePeralta Community College District which serves northernAlameda County. Laney College is named after Joseph Clarence Laney, a journalist who founded the Oakland Central Trade School.[3] The college offers both certificates and credits forAssociate of Arts degree, as well as prerequisites to transfer to four year universities. It is accredited by theAccrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges. Laney College is located in District 7 of the Peralta Community College District, which is represented by elected board trustee Sheweet Yohannes.[4]
Laney College traces its history to the Oakland Central Trade School by the Oakland Board of the Education in 1927 and the Merritt School of Business (nowMerritt College) founded in 1929. The trade school was later renamed Joseph C. Laney Trade and Technical Institute. Oakland Junior College was founded in 1953 with Laney serving as the vocational training center and Merritt hosting the liberal arts and business programs. In 1958, the college was renamed Oakland City College. With the establishment of thePeralta Junior College District in 1964, Laney Institute, located on the current campus, and Merritt College became separate autonomous colleges in their present-day forms. The current campus was opened prior to the 1970–71 academic year.[5]
On November 13, 2025,football coach and facultyathletics directorJohn Beam was shot on the campus of Laney College.[6] Beam died the next day. Beam was alsoprominent among the numerous Laney athletic faculties members who were featured infifth season of the Netflix documentary seriesLast Chance U, which was released in 2020.[7] The day before he was shot, Beam had expressed concerns about public safety on the campus of Laney College, and specifically the field house, after the Peralta Community College District in 2020 terminated its contract with theAlameda County Sheriff's Office that provided armed deputies to protect the school and replaced them with six unarmed private contractors.[8]
Most of the college's academic and administrative buildings are clustered together in a complex in the northern corner of the campus. The buildings are arranged on a rigid grid, with two levels of concrete pathways providing circulation. The square in the center of the complex has been reserved for thequad. Surrounding the quad are thestudent center,theater,library, andgymnasium. On one corner is the triangular "Laney Tower", the main administration building; on the opposite is another triangular building housing alecture hall and dance studio. Academic buildings form the outer ring of the complex. Each has a similar design, with outdoor courtyards in the centers of each square on a higher level, ringed by classrooms and offices; and more classrooms and vocational facilities on the lower level, all accessed from the perimeter of the building. However, none of the higher levels are on the same level as each other; they are connected by numerous stairs and ramps. Most of the outer buildings occupy two or three squares on the grid. The entire complex shares a red brick and concrete theme, with sharp corners, square and triangular shapes, and little vegetation.
The newest academic building is the art center, which is adjacent to the main complex but has its own architectural style. The building opened in the 2006–2007 school year. It was designed by Beverly Prior Architects to be built from prefabricated material, because of the short time frame between the start of construction and planned opening.
The channel that connects Lake Merritt to theOakland Estuary runs through the center of the campus. The southeastern half of the campus on the other side of the channel is mainly used for athletic and Peralta Community College District facilities. This section was also the former site of theWorld War II "Auditorium Housing Project" which housed war industry workers from around the United States, many of whom worked in theKaiser Shipyards. The housing was demolished sometime after the war, and in the early 1960s, a temporary football stadium calledFrank Youell Field was constructed on the site for use by theOakland Raiders.
As of the 2024–2025 academic year, Laney had 19 registered student clubs. These clubs ranged from affinity groups such as the Black Student Union to sports fellowships such as Soccer Nation.[9] Laney also offers numerous Student Communities which offer support to students by creating spaces for like minded students. Many of these communities offered tutoring, study spaces, and group mentorship for members.[10]
The Associated Students of Laney College (ASLC) is the official student government, composed of a president, vice president, student advocate, treasurer, publicity commissioner, clubs affairs officer, and seven senators, along with secretaries of internal and external affairs. The ASLC allocates funding for student clubs and campus events.
The student advocate serves as Laney College's representative to the Student Senate for California Community Colleges, a statewide body that advocates for student interests at the system-wide level.[11]
In 1960, student Linda Vail won theU.S. Tennis Association national intercollegiate women's tennis championships in both singles and doubles.[12]
The Laney Eagles compete in the Bay 6 Football Conference, which is governed by theCalifornia Community College Athletic Association (CCCAA). From 2012 to 2024 they were led by head coachJohn Beam, who won the CCCAA Coach of the Year award in 2018.
In the 2018 season, Laney won the CCCAA State Football Championship and was deemed the Mythical National Champion, due to the regional splits between the CCCAA, which governs all 68 California junior college football programs, and theNational Junior College Athletic Association, which governs junior college athletics across the rest of the United States, and covers 65 football programs.[13]
In 2020, Beam was featured infifth season of theNetflix documentary seriesLast Chance U.[14][15]