Quantcast El Vaquero
College Media Network

Ballot Measure Would Give Students a Break

Jennifer Tinoco

Issue date: 4/13/07 Section: News
Glendale College students may find their tuition fees reduced by 25 percent if the "Community College Governance, Funding Stabilization, and Student Fee Reduction Act," the California Community College Initiative, passes on the June 8 ballot.

Although the initiative was first proposed in November of 2006, organizers failed to obtain enough signitures for it to qualify for the ballot.

The initiative required one million endorsement signatures from registered voters. According to the California Federation of Teachers, the required signatures are now complete.

ASGCC Student Body President David Arakelyan said, "the initiative requires 650,000 signatures," but some people may have signed it more than once, therefore the goal was raised to a million.

Community College tuition is far lower that at the Cal State and UC campuses, but up until the early 1900s it cost nothing to attend most colleges in the state.

The Gavilan Library in Gilroy, Calif., states that community colleges were free dating back to 1916. The Web site www.gavilan.edu reports that, "... the cost became $5 per unit, then $6, suddenly up to $26, and now back down to $20 per unit as of January 2007."

Full-time students who are currently taking 12 or more units are be paying $240 plus student fees (inlcuding health fees) per semester. If the tuition reduces to $15 per unit, full time students will pay $180 plus student fees per semester.

Executive Vice President of Administrative Services, Larry Serot, said that the decrease in tuition fees has "definitely" raised enrollment in most community colleges throughout the state.

"I had to drop my math class since I was not able to pay it off," said student Jonathan Zeron. "If tuition reduces $5, I think that it will help a lot because every dollar adds up."

This initiative will not only help students financially, if passed, it will legitimize the imbalance that is cause by Proposition 98.

Proposition 98 is also known to guarantee "a minimum level of funding for public schools," since 1996. Its allocation depends on "changes in enrollment, per capita personal income, and projections of state tax revenues," stated on their Web site.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

Where should Obama place his priorities as president?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement