Los Angeles Times

UC, Cal State closer to big funding boost

Senate, Assembly panels OK increases to help enroll more California­ns and avoid tuition hikes.

- By Teresa Watanabe

SAN FRANCISCO — The University of California and California State University systems are poised to get major funding boosts that will help them enroll thousands of additional state students and eliminate the need for tuition increases in the coming school year.

A key Assembly budget panel on Wednesday approved $117.5 million in new funds for UC. A Senate panel approved a similar sum last week.

The same committees recently approved even more funding for the Cal State system.

The actions raise hopes that Gov. Jerry Brown will agree to the additional outlay during budget negotiatio­ns. But Brown, asked earlier this month if he was open to a bipartisan call for more funding for UC and CSU, said legislator­s had asked for billions of dollars in additional spending and “I can tell you all the people who want things won’t be getting what they’d like to have.”

For each of the public university systems, Brown has proposed a general fund increase of $92.1 million and a one-time infusion of $100 million to upgrade and maintain aging facilities.

News of an impending deal quickly circulated Wednesday morning at the UC Board of Regents meeting in San Francisco, prompting shout-outs of appreciati­on to supportive legislator­s and UC advocates who launched a unified lobbying push for more money.

“This puts us on a more stable course, and I hope it’s the start of a renewed partnershi­p with the state Legislatur­e,” board Chairman George Kieffer said.

The money approved for UC would eliminate the need for a tuition increase and help the system enroll 2,500 more California students this fall and an additional 2,500 in 2019.

Legislator­s also approved $12.5 million to help ease campus overcrowdi­ng. UC has enrolled 90,000 more students since 2000 with the

same level of state funding, leading to widespread complaints about students sitting on classroom floors and squeezing into dorms converted from doubles to triples and quads.

The Senate panel approved more money for campus overcrowdi­ng and less for enrollment growth. Those difference­s will need to be resolved in conference committee.

UC would receive $22.5 million in one-time funds for research into opioids, firearm violence, the health effects of sugar and valley fever, a lung infection caused by fungus in soil. The Assembly panel also approved one-time infusions of $5 million for campus efforts to fight hunger and $2 million to expand equal opportunit­y employment practices.

“UC and its students have made a convincing case this year that funding beyond the governor’s proposal is needed to meet increasing costs, address overcrowdi­ng on some campuses, support additional enrollment growth for the 2018-19 academic year, and address infrastruc­ture needs,” said the staff recommenda­tion of the Assembly Budget Subcommitt­ee on Education Finance.

Assemblyma­n Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento), who heads the budget subcommitt­ee, said the state’s booming economy enabled legislator­s to “do what we like to do, which is properly fund higher education in California.” The state has amassed a $9-billion budget surplus this year.

“Overall, it’s a huge win for our students in California and for the UC system, the flagship research university in the state,” McCarty said.

Subcommitt­ee members said they would continue to press UC to open its doors ever wider to California students and continue to cut administra­tive spending.

At the regents meeting, UC President Janet Napolitano praised the 2,500 students, faculty, regents, chancellor­s, alumni and staff behind an unpreceden­ted lobbying effort for more funds. They contacted state legislator­s more than 5,600 times this year, she said. Last year, 700 advocates made 2,500 contacts, said Kieran Flaherty, UC’s state government relations chief.

“We are pleased and grateful that our state legislator­s recognize how crucial it is to adequately fund the university,” Napolitano said.

Varsha Sarveshwar, a junior at UC Berkeley, said her student government office coordinate­d at least 15 trips to Sacramento — with as many as 25 students each time — to attend committee hearings and buttonhole legislator­s. Overall, students made more than 1,000 phone calls to key legislator­s and collected more than 6,000 stories of peers who would suffer without more funding, according to Rise, a statewide student organizati­on.

Sarveshwar said she still managed to maintain a 4.0 grade point average — in part by pulling six or seven all-nighters in the last weeks of classes.

“Since January, thousands of University of California students have called upon the Assembly to reinvest in our education. Today, we won,” she said. “We are incredibly heartened.”

Kieffer said Assemblyma­n Jose Medina (D-Riverside), who heads the Assembly Higher Education Committee, played a key role.

Both Assembly and Senate education finance panels also approved a major funding increase for Cal State University. The $215.7 million in extra funding the two panels approved for Cal State would help its 23 campuses enroll an additional 11,000 students. Cal State turned away 32,000 eligible students last year because it could not accommodat­e them.

The panels asked that at least $50 million of the extra Cal State funding be used to hire more tenure-track faculty to help boost graduation rates. The Assembly panel also approved onetime funding of $5 million to ease hunger on Cal State campuses and $14 million for “rapid rehousing” pilot projects at three campuses, offering needy students rental support and short-term case management.

Other items approved include $5 million to support the CSU Long Beach Shark Lab’s research on sharks and beach safety and $2 million for equal employment opportunit­y practices.

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