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Cabrillo College President to Retire

After more than seven years of service to Cabrillo College, including landing funds to build the first on-campus student housing, President-Superintendent Matt Wetstein will retire Dec. 31.

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Matt Wetstein

“Cabrillo College is a special place in a vibrant region,” said Wetstein. “The faculty and staff at Cabrillo are amazing and have built a caring culture for our students. I have thoroughly enjoyed the time that I have served as its leader … I will always cherish the friendships I have made at Cabrillo and in the Santa Cruz County community.”

Wetstein leaves a 29-year career in public higher education and plans to move to Stockton where he and his wife Cindy have a home — and spend time traveling.

He shared his plans with the Cabrillo College Governing Board Monday night.

The board will establish a committee to begin the search for his successor, aiming for the new leader to start in January 2026.


During his tenure, Wetstein contributed to both Cabrillo College and the Santa Cruz County community. Highlights include:

“Guided by his commitment to the values of compassion, gratitude and humility, Matt has contributed so much to Cabrillo College and the surrounding community during his tenure here,” said Christina Cuevas, Cabrillo Governing Board chair. “We will miss him, but know that in his time at Cabrillo, he made the College and the community it serves, a much better place.”

Before Cabrillo, Wetstein spent six years as assistant superintendent/vice president of instruction and planning at San Joaquin Delta College in Stockton. He taught political science there and served as dean of planning and research.

He is a leader in the Research and Planning Community for California Community Colleges, having spent six years on the board of that organization and two years as president.

He is the co-author of three books on the Canadian Supreme Court, one book on abortion politics in the U.S., and has published more than a dozen peer-reviewed articles on judicial behavior, abortion politics, and community college student success.

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