CHEYENNE â The Laramie County Community College men's basketball team hails from around the world â France, London, Wyoming, Nebraska, Idaho and Florida.Â
None of them have ever heard of the collegeâs longtime unofficial nickname, "Last Chance Cowboy College."
They came here on scholarships to play basketball and because the college has strong academic programs, so they donât see it as some sort of âlast chanceâ place. To them, itâs a place of opportunity.
But the name of the college can be confusing, they told Cowboy State Daily. That's because the college isnât in the town of Laramie, but in the Laramie County town of Cheyenne.
Despite that, they werenât too sure about a name change for the community college.
In fact, they were surprised to learn the college is considering changing its name.
âTheyâre changing the name?â T.J. Coulter asked, perplexed.Â
âWhat are they changing it to?â Josiah Ochoa wondered.
Ochoa, who is from Nevada, and Coulter, also from Nevada, along with Matt Tilly Charon of France and Isaac Fiagbe of London, said theyâd be for making the name âL-Tripâ because thatâs what everyone uses anyway.Â
Their counterparts, Karim Elgizawy, who is from Egypt, Brevin Phillips of Iowa and Lewis Dyer of Florida, felt the name should stay the same â or at most change to Cheyenne Community College, which would preserve the âTriple Câ nickname.
The name might be a little confusing, Elgizawy said. Itâs not that big a deal, Dyer and Phillips added.

Renting The Wrong Apartment
None of the men on the basketball team were so confused by the collegeâs location that they rented an apartment in Laramie. But thatâs something that has happened to other students, said LCCC President Joe Schaffer.
âWe have had students rent apartments in Laramie before they get here thinking thatâs where they are,â Schaffer said. âPeople say, âWell, people can figure that out.' But itâs just confusing.â
It became apparent that type of confusion was more than just a few students after the college started doing some marketing surveys to better understand why people do and donât choose LCCC for their education.Â
Lots of people highlighted confusion over the collegeâs location in those surveys, but the issues with its name run deeper than just that, Schaffer said.Â
The name is no longer capturing the opportunities LCCC offers. It has bachelor degree programs and a residence hall, things most people do not associate with community colleges.
The surveys showed that the word âcommunityâ is leading many to summarily dismiss what would otherwise be a good, affordable option suitable to their educational needs, Schaffer said.Â
That matters for the collegeâs future because most states in America, including Wyoming, are projected to see dramatically fewer high school graduates.
âBy 2040, there will be nine institutions in the state competing for about 1,800 college-going students,"Â Schaffer said.
That means LCCC needs to find a new pipeline of students if it wants to maintain a viable program.Â
A likely source of those students are surrounding states like Colorado and Utah, which have growing populations.
At the same time, improving the pipeline of students from surrounding states coming into Wyoming could help solve some of the stateâs brain-drain problem, Schaffer said. Thatâs where 60% of the stateâs college graduates leave Wyoming by the time theyâre 30.
âOne of the things we believe at the college is that the community college is â really all higher education in Wyoming â is a great value,â he said. âAnd could be part of that conduit to bring young people to the state, educate the, get them to stay, get them to work and do all those things, which means we have to look at other markets for that pipeline.â
Not The College I Remember
Lots of people weighed in against a name change on LCCCâs Facebook page, and several mentioned their unofficial names, Last Chance Community College or Last Chance Cowboy College, with some affection.
âI loved my time at LCCC, even though it was known as Last Chance Cowboy College, compared to being an outreach student at UW, which I hated,â Michelle McLean wrote about the college changing its name. âIâd rather LCCC NOT be rebranded. Itâs really not that hard to understand where the college is located.â
McClean also said sheâd like to see more bachelor's degree opportunities at the school, something the college didnât have when she attended but does now.
âThis was like 15 years ago,â she said. âI havenât heard it referred to Last Chance Cowboy College in years. Iâve heard itâs gotten so much better in the years since Iâve attended, but I really enjoyed my time there.â
Schaffer has heard a few versions of the unofficial name of the college.
âIâve heard Last Chance Cowboy College, Last Chance Community College, Iâve heard it all,â he said. âThatâs mostly gone by the wayside with our younger populations.â
Parents of some of the students still remember the name, though, and sometimes that presents a problem.
âWe had a young lady from Gillette, and I met her dad at move-in day, and her dad said, âI could not figure out why my daughter wanted to come here,ââ Schaffer said.Â
But now that the father was on the campus, he could see things had changed dramatically since he knew it as Last Chance Community College.
LCCC has a manufacturing center now devoted to developing young entrepreneurs in addition to its two bachelorâs degrees, and a new residence hall.Â
Itâs expanded its nursing programs, added programs like theater, arts, community orchestra â things more commonly found at a more regional institution.
âItâs not the college I remember,â Schaffer said the man told him.Â
âBut thatâs the perception,â Schaffer said. âAnd itâs tied to some of that connotation of the name, so weâve got those challenges.â

Careful With That
Community Colleges have been dropping the word âcommunityâ from their names for a long time now, retired LCCC president Charles Bohlen told Cowboy State Daily.
Some, like Gillette College, donât even put the word in their names to begin with as itâs become that out-dated.
âItâs a trend,â Bohlen said. âI served as interim president one year at Trinidad State Junior College (in Colorado), but once they started offering some bachelorâs degrees, they got rid of the word, âjunior,' which is a very old name for community colleges.â
Bohlen said he considered a name change for LCCC while he was president of the college from 1992 to 2006. Ultimately, he decided it wasnât the right time.
âAt the time when I was there, we belonged to the people of Laramie County,â he said. âSo, I thought it was important that the name Laramie County be in the name. And we were a true community college at that time.Â
"We offered the first two years of a bachelorâs degree, all the way through one-Â or two-year programs and technical education. So, community very much said the name.â
Since then, LCCC has added many things to its programs that go well beyond what peopleâs perception of a community college would be, Bohlen said. He can see the case for a name change now, though he recommends caution.
Brand loyalties and divisive politics have led name and logo changes to go awry in recent memory, like Cracker Barrelâs attempt to create a âstreamlinedâ logo that was criticized by some as going âwoke."
âYou do have to be careful with it, because you develop quite an identity around the name,â he said. âWe were, very proudly when I was there, Laramie County Community College, but we were a local college with a regional approach.Â
"So, we marketed ourselves in a region, not just to the people of Laramie County. Thatâs something they have to take in mind, too, is how broad is the mission and where do they see themselves serving.â

Six-Figure Process
What the new name will be hasnât been decided yet. Choosing it will be part of an overall rebranding process that will unfold in coming days and weeks, likely over a minimum 18-month timeline, Schaffer said.
The cost will depend on the overall outcome of the process.
âIf youâre doing a very simple name change, like dropping the âcommunity,' you can edit, amend, and change things relatively simply,â he said. âOthers have gone with a completely different name, as well as a mascot change, color change, brand change and things like that.â
The cost of the overall name change is likely to be in the six-figure range depending on what the new name is and other decisions, Schaffer said.
âItâs really going to be unique to our own journey,â Schaffer said. âBut I think whatâs important to understand is the board approved the intent to move forward but has not said flip the switch. I think thatâs important because we donât know the true logistics. We donât know the full extent.Â
"One of the things thatâs been proposed is maybe part of it is just shifting to the acronym, like weâve seen with FNBO, First National Bank of Omaha, or Western Governorâs University, which is now WGU or IBM, you know, pick your flavor.â
Schaffer has had people ask if there will be a contest to develop a new name, and thatâs something he canât answer yet.Â
âI imagine weâll have a steering group or committee that will kind of shepherd and oversee that part of the process,â he said. âHopefully, weâll have both internal and external people as well as students involved with that. And weâll certainly engage the public broadly in the discussion and the solicitation of ideas.â
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.