FIRST PERSON
Students get a glimpse of Democracy
Seth Nidever
Issue date: 3/26/04 Section: Opinion
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They told Florez the state should honor Prop. 98, a 1988 ballot measure which they said guaranteed community colleges exactly 10.93 percent of whatever money the state allocates for public schools below the four-year university level.
Prop. 98 guaranteed a minimum level of funding for elementary, secondary, and community college education but didn't specify how it would be distributed. The group said that enabling legislation guaranteed community colleges a 10.93 percent piece of the Prop. 98 pie.
And they asserted that community colleges have consistently received less than that percentage, resulting in a cumulative loss of $4 billion.
According to Eso, the legislature has suspended Prop. 98 almost every year since 1988 so that K-12 can get more than the original 89.07% they were entitled to.
Eso also claimed that Schwarzenegger made a deal with the California Teacher's Association to cut in half the amount owed by K-12.
"Personally, I think it was just, they could do that so publicly they could say they gave up 2 billion dollars," said Eso.
In a March 17 telephone interview, Ken Meier, vice president of student learning at BC, agreed with that assessment.
"When politicians are faced with these (budget) shortfalls, they find it easier to lowball the community colleges," he said.
"I do think the kinds of marches that happened alert politicians that they need to be more proactive," he added
In a separate interview with The Rip, H. D. Palmer, a spokesman for the California Department of Finance, said that the $2 billion was in fact an across-the-board cut.
"It's part of an effort to close the state's budget gap," he said.
Palmer pointed out that the governor is proposing to actually increase community college funding at the same time fees are being raised.
"No pun intended, that's an academic argument," he said, referring to the Prop. 98 issue. "Community colleges are the one area of the budget where the governor is actually going to increase expenditures."
Palmer noted that community college fees will still be lower than any other state.
He also said that the increased fees would be offset by greater access to federal financial aid.
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