| Information provided by California Community Colleges
Chancellor's Office.
Late yesterday, the Budget Conference Committee finalized
actions related to the education budget. The Budget Conference
Committee continues to meet with a plan to finalize actions on all
areas of the budget this week.
For the California Community Colleges, the proposed budget
package includes $630 million in cuts and $115 million in funding
deferrals. The major difference between the Governor's proposed
budget and the Budget Conference Committee proposal is the addition
of $210 million in new revenues ($80 million from a student fee
increase and $130 million from federal stimulus funds). The
committee's budget proposal directs these new revenues to be used
to decrease cuts to categorical programs by $140 million, and to
reduce cuts to the general apportionment by $70 million. The
specifics are as follows:
Current Year (2008-09):
- Defer $115 in apportionment payments from fiscal year 2008-09
to fiscal year 2009-10
- Apply $85 million in unallocated cuts to categorical programs
and/or general apportionments
- $42.1 million local property tax shortfall with no
backfill
Budget Year (2009-10):
- Increase student fees to $26 per unit effective Fall 2009
(raises $80 million in revenues that are used to mitigate cuts to
categorical programs and general apportionments)
- Assumes that community colleges will receive $130 million in
federal stimulus funds to backfill cuts (one-time funds)
- Eliminate 3% enrollment growth, cut of $175.2 million (means no
funding for growth)
- $193 million in cuts to categorical programs -- cuts vary by
program:
- No cuts: Student Financial Aid Administration, Foster Care
Education
- Approximately 16 percent cut: CalWORKs services, Basic Skills,
Disabled Students Programs and Services, EOPS & CARE, Fund for
Student Success, Nursing
- Approximately 20 percent cut: Telecommunication/Technology
- Approximately 32 percent cut: Academic Senate, Apprenticeship,
Child Care Tax Bailout, Economic Development, Equal Employment
Opportunity, Transfer Education and Articulation, Matriculation,
Part-time Faculty Compensation, Part-time Faculty Health Insurance,
Part-time Faculty Office Hours
- Eliminate: Physical Plant/Instructional Equipment, California
High School Exit Exam (CAHSEE), SB 70 CTE funding ($38 million
appropriated in SB 1133 remains intact)
- Provide categorical flexibility for districts. Specifically,
allows districts to redirect funds from any of the categorical
programs subject to the 32 percent reduction above, to support any
other categorical program funded in the state budget. Before
utilizing this flexibility, districts would be required to discuss
the redirection of funds at a regularly scheduled public meeting.
This flexibility applies to fiscal years 2009-10 through
2012-13.
- Reject May Revision proposal to lower the funding rate for
Physical Education courses to the noncredit rate. Instead, approve
an unallocated $120 million reduction to community college general
apportionments ($70 million of this reduction is then backfilled
with new revenues)
- Authorize adjustments to base workload measures commensurate
with reductions in general apportionments. This will reduce base
workload expectations for purposes of apportionment calculations
and make it easier for districts to make necessary cuts to course
sections. Language states intent that reductions in course
sections, to the greatest extent possible, be achieved in areas
other than basic skills, CTE, and transfer.
- A $116.7 million local property tax shortfall with a partial
backfill of $63.3 million.
- Committee did not act on the Governor's proposal to suspend the
50 percent law and 75/25 requirements for 5 years.
- The Conference Committee also took action to reject the
Governor's proposal to eliminate new Cal Grant awards. They did
however approve some cost savings beginning in 2010-11 by freezing
income eligibility for Cal Grant A and reducing Cal Grant private
awards by 5 percent.
Next steps:
This budget proposal will go to the Senate and Assembly floors
where it will be debated and voted upon. It is likely that "Big 5"
meetings will also take place - these are meetings where Democrat
and Republican legislative leaders from both houses and the
Governor meet to resolve any outstanding differences between his
budget proposal and the committee proposal. It is quite possible
that the Conference Committee's proposed budget plan, including the
community college proposal, will undergo additional modifications
before a final budget is approved. State leaders are intent on
wrapping up the budget deal by June 30 in order to avoid a cash
shortfall during the month of July. Time will tell if they are
capable of meeting that deadline.
Conference Committee Budget Chart -
6/17/2009
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