During the public-comment period, a visitor identified as Peter Martinez addressed the council to share updates from Imperial Valley College and to build partnership with city leaders.
Martinez said the college "just wrapped up our academic year on a strong note" and reported several goals for the 2025–26 academic year, including increasing registered-nursing enrollment "from 80 to 150 students," expanding countywide noncredit programs, boosting summer enrollment (which he said set a historical record at IVC), and reinforcing online learning and dual-enrollment opportunities that allow high-school students to take up to 15 college units.
He also reported graduation figures from a recent commencement: "we proudly celebrated the accomplishments of 2,730 students" and those graduates earned about "2,127 degrees and certificates," which required splitting ceremonies into morning and afternoon sessions. Martinez said the board of trustees adopted strategic plans to support working adults, basic-skills programs, trade and occupational training, and transfer-degree pathways.
Martinez highlighted a planned women’s law-enforcement seminar scheduled for Jan. 30 at IVC involving local, county and federal agencies, the county office of education and the district attorney's office. He closed by requesting continued partnership and suggested setting up a 2-on-2 meeting with council members and IVC trustees; the mayor offered to arrange such a meeting.
The remarks were delivered during the public-comment portion of the meeting; they did not prompt council action at the session beyond an offer to convene follow-up meetings.