About Prop 92

  • Lowers fees to $15 a unit
  • Limits future fee increases
  • Provides stable funding for community colleges for more classes and services
  • Guarantees that the community college system is independent from state politics
  • Does not hurt K-12 funding or raise taxes

California Community Colleges prepare students for four-year college, provide workplace skills and life-long learning skills, increase community economic development and provide instruction in basic skills for those who lack them.

Proposition 92 - the California Community College Initiative - will enhance this mission by lowering fees to $15 per unit - ensuring that community colleges are affordable. It also limits the rise in future fees to the cost of living. It provides stable funding for California community colleges. In addition, it guarantees that the community college system is independent from state politics.

Lowers Student Fees      

Proposition 92 provides stable, affordable and predictable student fees by lowering fees to $15 per unit and limiting future fee increases to no more than the cost of living. When the Legislature doubled student fees in 2003-04, they also cut the state’s contribution to community colleges by an equal amount. This meant that the community colleges were no better off and that the students paid more. It also meant that once again the students were pawns in the budget battle. In 2004, when fees were hiked, 305,000 fewer students in California enrolled. Now that fees are starting to stabilize, we are starting to see community college enrollment increase across the state. Recent projections from the California Postsecondary Education Commission suggest that by the year 2010, 500,000 - 700,000 additional applicants will be heading to higher education – likely three-fourths of them to community colleges. We need to ensure the community colleges are ready for this surge.

Stable Funding      

According to data from the National Center for Education Statistics, the California community college system ranked 45th in support per full-time student revenue out of the 49 states surveyed in 1999-2000 (PPIC 2004). Under current education funding (set by Proposition 98) the community college system is supposed to receive about 11% of education funding while 89% goes to K-12. The legislature routinely suspends this agreement and when the money is repaid – community colleges are routinely shortchanged. Over the past 10 years the amount owed to the community colleges totals more than $4 billion. Proposition 92 would not change how K-12 is funded and would not negatively impact the funding of K-12. However, it would require minimum levels of state funding for community colleges and take budget politics out of the equation. It would calculate the minimum community college funding guarantees based on community college growth, instead of being tied to the K-12 population. Unlike the K-12 system which provides that every student enrolled is automatically funded – Proposition 92 uses a new formula based on eligible population.

Growing the Middle Class      

Community Colleges help grow California’s middle class by giving every Californian the chance to go to college. Our community colleges provide an education for more than 2.5 million students per year – compared to 180,000 students at UC and 380,000 students at CSU. Two-thirds of all CSU graduates and one-third of all UC graduates began at community colleges. The average age of community college students is 28 and 60% of the student population is female. Additionally, two-thirds of community college students work while going to school.

Training California's Workforce      

California needs 3.2 million new college-educated workers––nurses, teachers, engineers and others––to keep our competitive edge and community colleges can help meet that need. The system’s contribution in 2005-06 to the state’s workforce included more than 63,000 associate degrees and certificates in vocational/occupational areas. Graduates with associate degrees earn, on average, $500,000 more in their lifetimes than those with only a high school diploma. For every one dollar California invests in students to get a degree, the state ends up getting three dollars back (U.C. Berkeley Study 2005).

Diversity      

There are more than 300,000 Latino students and more than 90,000 African-American students attending community colleges, more than in both the CSU and UC systems combined. 250,000 Californians from Asian and Pacific Islander backgrounds are enrolled in community colleges.

Independence      

Proposition 92 protects local control of community colleges and guarantees that the community college system is independent from state politics. It guarantees a stable system of independent public community college districts and a Board of Governors by placing the current bilateral governance system in the state constitution. It allows the Board of Governors and Chancellor to hire staff professionals, who are currently appointed by the Governor. This is the same authority provided to the UC President and to the CSU Chancellor.

Supporters of Proposition 92      

Proposition 92 is supported by a broad coalition of community college leaders, advocates, local trustees and students – including the California Federation of Teachers, the Community College League of California, the Faculty Association of California Community Colleges, the California School Employees Association and the Los Angeles College Faculty Guild.

 

Student Stories

Bernard Casey

Named the #1 community college student in California by the American Association of Community Colleges and one of the top 40 students in the nation by USA Today in 2006, Casey said that his recent achievements and awards were "something he never dreamed possible" in his troubled life.

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Prop 92 in the News

Berkeley Elected Officials Make It Unanimous: “YES ON PROPOSITION 92”

Mayor, City Council, and members of all the Boards join with community college students, faculty and trustees.

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Business and Taxpayer Groups Across the State Support Proposition 92

Business groups across the state are part of the broad coalition including labor and community organizations, as well as college leaders, advocates, local trustees and students supporting Proposition 92, the Community College Initiative, on the February 5 statewide ballot.

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Proposition 92 Endorsed by Santa Cruz Sentinel

The Santa Cruz Sentinel has called on voters to support Proposition 92, the Community College Initiative on the February 2008 statewide ballot, with an encouraging editorial recognizing the significance of California Community Colleges.

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More from the newsroom

 

YES ON PROPOSITION 92 ­ Californians for Improving Community Colleges, a coalition of educators
and community college organizations with major funding by the California Federation of Teachers Prop/Ballot Committee,
the Los Angeles College Faculty Guild and the Faculty Association of California Community Colleges.