The California Community Colleges Board of Governors voted to ask for about $780 million in additional state dollars for the 2020-21 budget year, which would be a 7.5 percent increase over its current budget of about $10.3 billion.
The request made on Sept. 17 includes more than $250 million for financial aid reform and about $426 million in extra spending through Proposition 98, which sets the minimum amount of Californiaās budget that must be spent on K-12 schools and community colleges.
The request serves as the beginning of negotiations between the California community college system and the state, which will finalize its 2020-21 budget in June.
Christian OsmeƱa, vice chancellor for finance and facilities planning, said last week at the meeting that the budget requests are meant to advance the āVision for Success,ā Chancellor Eloy Ortiz Oakleyās road map to improve the systemās ability to prepare students for further education or work.
OsmeƱa also said the community college systemās needs āremain significant,ā noting that the system receives less in per-student spending than the University of California and California State University systems.
āWe serve more students generally,ā he said. āWe have more colleges and campuses. We serve more low-income students and more students of color. I think we have a lot of work to do around how we talk to legislators and the administration about the needs of our system.ā
The systemās request for about $250 million for financial aid reform reflects the first-year cost of SB 291, proposed legislation that aims to create debt-free college for students. The bill would create the California Community College Student Financial Aid Program, giving aid to community college students to cover the total cost of attending college, including living costs, books, transportation and other non-tuition costs.
Proponents of the bill say that it is necessary because, for many students, the total cost of attending a community college far exceeds the cost of tuition.
The California community college system earlier this year backed the bill. The legislation stalled in the Assembly and is now a two-year bill, but the Board of Governors is still advocating for the changes proposed in the bill. The author of the legislation, Sen. Connie Leyva, D-Chino, has said she will work with Assemblyman Jose Medina, D-Riverside, to integrate SB 291 with Medinaās AB 1314, which would reform Cal Grant programs and eliminate eligibility barriers to receiving Cal Grants.
āWe know that oftentimes the biggest barrier to students is not being able to pay for that full cost of attendance,ā OsmeƱa said.
The systemās budget request also includes an additional $297 million, through Proposition 98, for the Student Centered Funding Formula, the new method for supporting the systemās colleges that gives more money to schools with higher numbers of low-income students and to colleges with better graduation and transfer rates.
Also included in the request is $100 million to support the systemās pension costs and about $76 million for the implementation of recommendations brought forth by the Vision for Success Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Task Force, which recommended a number of budget proposals, including $40 million for full-time faculty hiring, $15 million to create a fellowship program to increase the hiring of diverse faculty and $20 million to improve equal employment opportunity (EEO) practices.
Other proposals in the budget request were $10 million to make textbooks more affordable, $15 million for faculty and staff professional development, an extra $10 million for programs that support part-time faculty, $10 million to support formerly incarcerated students and a $20 million increase for the Student Equity and Achievement Program, which finances academic programs that support students with the greatest needs, such as foster youth, students with disabilities and low-income students.
Story originally published by EdSource.
