COMMUNITY COMMENTARY -- William E. Vega
As we enter the back-to-school season this month, Orange County’s
community colleges are still reeling from the news we recently received
-- that this year’s state budget included dramatic cuts in our funding.
When legislators in Sacramento finally agreed in July on a state
spending plan for 2001-02, we knew we would have to do more with less.
But Gov. Gray Davis vetoed $126 million more from community colleges,
including ongoing scheduled maintenance and instructional equipment
funds. Community colleges in Orange County and throughout the state were
stunned. That $126 million represented 23% of all the governor’s blueline
cuts.
The most significant reduction is losing the nearly $100 million in
ongoing funding for scheduled maintenance and instructional materials --
$3 million of which would have been allocated to Coast Community College
District colleges -- Coastline Community College, Golden West College and
Orange Coast College. Those funds would have been used for building
maintenance and energy conservation programs, projects aimed at
protecting the health and safety of students and upgrades for computers
and other technology we use to train the high-tech workers Orange
County’s economy demands.
California’s community college system, including the Coast Community
College District, is facing the largest student enrollment increase in
all of higher education. It is a travesty that we received the smallest
budget increase of the state’s three state-run institutions this year.
The 3.2% increase in community college system funding was below both the
University of California system at 4.8% and the California State
University system at 6.4%.
Over the last decade, California’s community colleges have become
experts at serving the largest segment of the state’s higher education
students with the fewest resources. Thanks to chronic under-funding,
we’ve had lots of practice. Because we have never received our full
allotment of funding from Proposition 98, community colleges have had to
do without a cumulative $2.7 billion allocated to us by the voters of
this state in 1988.
The Coast Community College District is feeling the budget squeeze
even more due to an unfair state funding formula that gives us one of the
lowest allocations in the state, despite our area’s high cost of living
and burgeoning economy.
Meanwhile, we continue to face the challenges of providing educational
opportunities at an affordable price to an influx of new students. The
students who make up the so-called “Tidal Wave II” are now graduating
from high school and heading to community colleges in droves -- creating
the largest student enrollment increase in all of higher education.
Community colleges will be scrambling for some relief from the
governor’s draconian budget cuts this fall. Meanwhile, rest assured that
the Coast Community College District will continue to do what it does
best -- provide more opportunities for more students with fewer
resources. But how long can we continue to do so?
* William M. Vega is chancellor of the Coast Community College
District, which is responsible for the district’s three colleges --
Coastline Community College, Golden West College, Orange Coast College --
and the district’s public broadcasting station, KOCE-TV. The district,
the seventh largest in the nation in credit enrollment, serves 55,000
students each semester, employs more than 5,000 full- and part-time
faculty and staff and has an annual budget of more than $161 million.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.