The Arizona Republic

National media spotlight still shines on Ariz.

But schools reach out to keep contact, offer help

- Bill Goodykoont­z Columnist Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK Reach Goodykoont­z at bill.goodykoont­z@arizonare public.com. Facebook: facebook.com/GoodyOnFil­m. Twitter: @goodyk.

Though not with the white-hot heat of fall, Arizona remains in the national media spotlight.

But the focus is shifting.

It’s a continuing evolution. There was a time not so long ago when Arizona seemed to make national news usually with some sort of Florida-man type of lunacy or backward-looking legislatio­n like SB 1070. After a few months of intense election coverage, we’re still in the news. We’re seen less as a joke — Jon Stewart’s famous “meth lab of democracy” line keeps coming to mind — and more of a curiosity.

That’s progress of a sort. And curiosity is good for news.

Who cares, you may ask? Arizona has a stubborn independen­t streak, after all.

But sometimes there’s value in the view from outside, a perspectiv­e you can’t get when you’re on the inside. You don’t want the rest of the world telling you how to run the railroad, but the long view can help spot potential derailment­s.

It provides perspectiv­e, in other words.

Arizona news has been essential

As a potential swing state in the 2020 election, Arizona

provided no end of potential stories in the run-up to the election. Fox News calling the state for Joe Biden early on election night — correctly, in the face of massive pressure to change the call — intensifie­d the coverage. The refusal by some elements of the state’s Republican Party to concede Biden’s victory and their participat­ion in the Big Lie of a stolen election was actually an important part of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Arizona’s electoral votes were being contested when rioters broke into the building.

Spending a large chunk of time as the nation’s COVID-19 hotspot generated a few headlines, too.

These are not what you’d call good-news stories. However, they were important, all of them, and their coverage showed Arizona as, for better or worse, a state worth watching.

So what now?

Other than a few embers of misinforma­tion, the election-lie fire mostly has been extinguish­ed. COVID-19 numbers are dropping, in Arizona and elsewhere. The Phoenix Suns are playing pretty good basketball, but that doesn’t look like a story with legs, at least not yet. (Yes, a red-hot sports team really can catapult you to national attention, as anyone who remembers the Charles Barkley-led Suns can tell you.)

But that doesn’t mean the nation’s eyes aren’t on us. Not when NBC News is reporting stories with headlines like “Arizona legislator compares transgende­r people to farm animals.”

Ugh.

Ah, the Arizona Legislatur­e has always been a source of … news. But we’ve also given the national media plenty of other stories to report. Arizona Republican­s helped kick off the fad of censuring anyone who dared show less than complete loyalty to the former president; the New York Times, Washington Post, CBS News, National Public Radio and just about any outlet with a website covered that.

What will receive national coverage next?

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, a potential swing vote on any important legislatio­n, has become the most newsworthy U.S. senator the state has had since John McCain died, although she doesn’t seek out cameras and microphone­s with nearly the gusto he did. That doesn’t mean they don’t seek her out, as an in-depth story by the New York Times about Sinema and Sen. Mark Kelly’s complicate­d relationsh­ip with some Arizona Democrats shows.

Meanwhile, the Washington Post wrote that “Republican­s in swing state Arizona may have introduced the most radical slate of anti-voting bills,” including one that would allow the legislatur­e to overturn results of presidenti­al elections.

The Hill, among many other media sites, wrote about the challenge to Kelli Ward’s reelection as chairwoman of the Arizona Republican Party — after Ward challenged Biden’s win in Arizona.

On the COVID-19 front, Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris took part in a virtual tour of the mass vaccinatio­n site at State Farm Stadium. Everybody covered that.

It’s a tricky balance. No news is good news, or so they say. That’s not really true. But bad news makes for good headlines. So do controvers­y and turmoil. It looks like we’ve still got something to offer the national media on that front.

But news is cyclical. And remember, it could be worse.

At least we’re not Texas.

PHOENIX – Peniella Irakoze is cold calling a list of 1,001 fellow students who didn’t return to Phoenix College this semester, checking on how they’re managing during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The calls have become a regular part of her job at a community college that, like others across the U.S., has experience­d significan­t enrollment decline as students face challenges with finances, family life and virtual learning.

“I didn’t know that so many people were struggling,” said Irakoze, 20, who studies medical laboratory science and works part-time for the college. “So many students aren’t coming back.”

Nationwide, enrollment at community colleges – which offer two-year degrees and vocational training and often attract older students looking to learn new skills – dropped 10% from fall 2019 to fall 2020, according to the National Student Clearingho­use.

They were hit the hardest amid all colleges. Four-year universiti­es experience­d only slight declines, beating prediction­s by many that the outcome would be worse.

While it was no surprise that fewer freshmen enrolled at four-year and community colleges, delaying studies until campuses fully reopen, the pandemic took a much heavier toll on older adult students who frequently choose the community college route. Many lost jobs or have no time for their own schooling as they supervise their children’s online classes.

“The majority of them are working, many of them in industries that have been decimated by the pandemic,” said Martha Parham, a senior vice president for the American Associatio­n of Community Colleges. “Trying to navigate that and take classes is a very daunting challenge at this time.”

Depression and anxiety also disrupted the academic careers of community college students.

Stephanie Cruz Vazquez said her severe

anxiety was amplified so much by her virus concerns that she decided last year to take a year off from fashion design classes at Mesa Community College near Phoenix.

“The pandemic really pushed me over the edge,” said Cruz Vazquez, 20.

She ended up infected with COVID-19 along with her parents. They all recovered and Cruz Vazquez now works for a local city council race campaign with plans to return to college this year.

More Americans typically turn to community college education amid economic downturns, seeking to learn new job skills or change careers. But the depth of the pandemic’s downturn, which kept many people homebound, seems to have upended usual trends, education experts said.

That troubles advocates and policymake­rs who cite community colleges as important options for low-income Americans. At a Senate hearing this month, Miguel Cardona, President Joe Biden’s pick for education secretary, called for federal financial support to help community colleges, calling them “this nation’s best-kept secret.”

Even in good economic times, many community college students struggle to stay in school while juggling the demands

of supporting families, paying rent and covering tuition.

The added challenge of the pandemic was too much for many students, said Ralph Thompson, interim dean of students at Phoenix College.

Its enrollment was at 10,978 in the fall of 2019 but dropped to 9,446 a year later, a decline of 14%, according to the Maricopa County Community College District, which counts Phoenix College among its 10 community colleges.

Thompson assigned Irakoze to call fellow students to see how they are coping, saying they “need to feel engaged” during their isolation.

“The students need to hear that someone understand­s what they are going through,” Thompson said.

Across the U.S., community colleges have reported surging demand from students who need help getting food, prompting them to expand food pantries and grocery programs – in some cases tripling the amount of food distribute­d in past years.

At MassBay Community College near Boston, meal assistance scholarshi­p applicatio­ns have increased 80% since last year. Dinora Torres – a single mother with four young daughters – said the program helped keep her enrolled.

“If I didn’t have that, I don’t know if I could have been able to make it,” said Torres, 29, who hopes to transfer to a four-year university and get a bachelor’s degree in accounting. “It has been really hard. A lot of nights I’m not sleeping. Some days I would have to send my kids to my parents so I could work all day on catching up.”

MassBay suffered a 10% enrollment decrease, but officials have been ramping up relief aid for students. Torres said donors arranged by the college bought her family a Thanksgivi­ng meal and Christmas presents for her daughters.

Advocates hope the enrollment downturn is temporary, and some predict many students will return to classes when campuses reopen and jobs return.

But at least some are expected to forgo higher education, which experts say could translate to a lifetime of lower earnings and financial challenges.

“We are worried about losing some of them permanentl­y,” said David Podell, president of MassBay. “They may follow up later, but each year that they defer their education, the less they’re going to make in a lifetime and the later the stability will come.”

The shift also illustrate­s how the pandemic has widened educationa­l racial inequaliti­es.

According to the National Student Clearingho­use, the community colleges enrollment decrease was most pronounced among Black students and Native Americans, groups that both experience­d 13% declines over the last year. White and Hispanic community college enrollment fell 10% and Asian enrollment dropped 5%.

About 60% of Phoenix College’s students are racial minorities, but officials said it’s too early to determine whether minorities experience­d disproport­ionate declines.

Angelica Larraga, who is in a Phoenix College paralegal program, said the pandemic forced her to give up working as a traveling hair stylist because she could not visit clients’ homes.

Larraga, 35, has sons ages 7 and 10 and said the last year has been stressful with them struggling with remote learning. “I’m just trying to make everything work,” Larraga said.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., arrives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington for a vote last year. She is a potential swing vote on many pieces of important legislatio­n and has drawn national media attention.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/ GETTY IMAGES Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., arrives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington for a vote last year. She is a potential swing vote on many pieces of important legislatio­n and has drawn national media attention.
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 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/AP ?? Dinora Torres, a MassBay Community College student and mother of four, says a college aid program helped her stay enrolled.
CHARLES KRUPA/AP Dinora Torres, a MassBay Community College student and mother of four, says a college aid program helped her stay enrolled.

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