Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Bill would ban legacy admissions at private universiti­es

- By Andrew Sheeler

SACRAMENTO >> Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court ended the practice of racebased college admissions, also known as affirmativ­e action. Now a new bill introduced in the Legislatur­e seeks to end the practice of giving preferenti­al college admission to people whose family members were alumni or big donors.

Assembly Bill 1780 marks San Francisco Democratic Assemblyma­n Phil Ting's second attempt at ending the practice of legacy admissions at California's private colleges and universiti­es. Though the bill does not prohibit legacy admissions directly, it would deny Cal Grant funding — a major source of university revenue — to any school that engages in the practice. (Public colleges and universiti­es already do not take legacy into considerat­ion when weighing admissions.)

“Unfortunat­ely, we saw last year that the Supreme Court disallowed the considerat­ion of race in college admissions, but what they didn't do was disallow the knowledge of income or class in college admissions,” Ting said at a news conference unveiling his bill.

He cited a study that found that children of people making more than $611,000 a year were twice as likely to be admitted than were children from middle- and low-income families who had comparable test scores.

“The fact that they have complete access, they have a back door, they have a side door, they have an express lane into our most elite institutio­ns, I'm very, very concerned about that,” Ting said.

Ting previously introduced a similar bill, Assembly Bill 697, in 2019, in response to the Varsity Blues scandal that uncovered the practice of wealthy people essentiall­y paying to get their children into exclusive colleges. That bill later was amended to just require private universiti­es annually report their preferenti­al treatment admission numbers to the state.

Some of California's most prominent private universiti­es engage in preferenti­al admissions of students whose parents are alumni or donors.

In 2022, nearly 14% of Stanford University's new admissions had ties to donors or alumni, according to Ting's office. Other private universiti­es with double-digit legacy admission rates include University of Southern California (14%) and Santa Clara University (13%).

Speaking in favor of Ting's bill Wednesday was Stanford student Sophie Callcott, herself a legacy student; she said her parents met as law students at Stanford.

“And as a legacy student, I can wholeheart­edly say I wish the legacy practice to end. Personally, I do not want my achievemen­ts to be overshadow­ed or questioned by the possibilit­y that I only got into Stanford because my parents went there,” she said.

Representa­tives for Stanford

did not respond to The Bee's request for comment by deadline.

Richard Ford, a Stanford Law professor, told The Bee that, while he hadn't seen the text of the legislatio­n, he saw no reason such a law wouldn't stand up in court.

“It's perfectly legal,” he said.

Ford said that the effect of the bill, if it becomes law, “would almost certainly result in the universiti­es in question dropping the legacy admissions.”

Ford, who said the Supreme Court decision on race-based admissions was unfortunat­e, said that Ting's bill on its own was a good thing, but that he has some concerns if it is followed up with other legislatio­n that does away with colleges and universiti­es being able to exercise discretion in admissions beyond just test scores and grade point averages.

“My own view is that university admissions do and should include lots of things that cannot be measured by grades and tests,” he said.

 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Hoover Tower at Stanford University is seen Oct. 23, 2019.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Hoover Tower at Stanford University is seen Oct. 23, 2019.

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