Los Angeles Times

Higher education would get a boost

Newsom’s plan funds affordable housing, job training, facility repairs

- By Teresa Watanabe and Howard Blume

Proposal funds student housing, job training and facilities.

California public colleges and universiti­es will receive a massive funding boost to expand affordable student housing, repair aging facilities, better train students for state workforce needs and shift Humboldt State to a technology focus under the budget proposal unveiled Friday by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The state’s unexpected $75-billion surplus allowed Newsom to restore steep cuts imposed last year as the COVID-19 pandemic battered the economy and to invest a recordsett­ing $48.7 billion in the University of California, California State University, California Community Colleges and the California Student Aid Commission. That amounts to a 5% increase in base ongoing general funds for UC and Cal State, Newsom said.

This higher education funding comes on top of Newsom’s proposed $93.7 billion for the kindergart­en-through-12th grade public education system. That historic investment includes funds to guarantee schooling for all 4-year-olds, a program to be phased in over three years beginning in fall 2022.

“This is just simply without precedent,” Newsom said at a news conference Friday.

For K-12 schools, Newsom is primarily making use of dollars that he already is required to spend on education, based on formulas embedded in the state’s Constituti­on. He could have forwarded the funds to local school systems, giving them more spending discretion. Instead, he wants to leave an imprint by directing the use of this money.

Newsom also is

putting his mark on higher education, funding programs to achieve what he calls his top priorities of “affordabil­ity, access and efficiency.”

Moving beyond tuition and fees to help students cover a broader array of college costs, Newsom is proposing $4 billion in onetime funds over the next two years to award grants to UC, Cal State and community colleges to build affordable student housing or acquire commercial properties to do so, with priority access given to low-income and underrepre­sented students.

He also is proposing $115 million in one-time funding for community colleges to eliminate textbook costs by developing free and open educationa­l resources and certificat­e and degree programs that don’t incur those expenses.

The governor also advanced his priority to help students develop job skills needed in California. A new $1-billion investment of onetime funds over the next two years will create a program to help campuses identify employers willing to offer career opportunit­ies to students related to their fields of study. Funds would be distribute­d to campuses based on their share of low-income students, with priority on placing underrepre­sented students in science, technology, engineerin­g and math fields.

Newsom said the proposed funding was conditione­d on no tuition increase for fall 2021, significan­t progress in closing achievemen­t gaps, more online learning and greater alignment with state workforce needs. UC regents are weighing a limited tuition increase for the incoming class beginning in fall 2022.

The governor also reiterated his directive that

UC and Cal State create a program enabling first-time freshman applicants to be considered for guaranteed admission to the UC or Cal State campus of their choice after completing required community college work.

UC, Cal State and community college leaders, whose campuses collective­ly educate nearly 3 million students in the nation’s largest and most diverse higher education systems, hailed Newsom’s proposals.

UC President Michael V. Drake and Board of Regents Chair John A. Pérez expressed gratitude for what they called the largest state investment in UC’s 153-year history, totaling more than $807 million.

Newsom restored a $302.4-million budget cut imposed last year and added $506 million in ongoing funding for core campus operations, student needs, and the training of diverse medical profession­als to expand access to healthcare in underserve­d and geographic­ally isolated communitie­s.

UC also will get $325 million in one-time state and federal funds to repair aging facilities and improve energy efficiency. Other one-time grants will help renovate the UCLA Labor Center building, support research by the UCLA Asian American Studies Center to prevent anti-Asian hate incidents, enhance dyslexia research at UC San Francisco, and help UC Davis work with animal shelters to prevent the euthanasia of dogs and cats.

“The allocation recognizes the University’s role as a key driver of California’s economic future,” the UC leaders said in a statement.

The proposal “contains many visionary strategies,” said Cal State University Chancellor Joseph I. Castro. “Investing in the CSU — the nation’s largest and most diverse public university — continues to be one of the wisest and most consequent­ial decisions our state’s leaders can make with an eight-fold return on every dollar that California invests in the university.”

He particular­ly lauded the proposal to provide $433 million to shift Humboldt State University into the Cal State system’s third polytechni­c campus, joining Pomona and San Luis Obispo, to train more students in the state’s underserve­d northern reaches for fast-growing STEM fields.

Overall, Cal State would receive an increase of $514.9 million in ongoing funding for 2021-22, which includes restoring a $299-million budget cut last year and adding money for mental health, basic needs and other programs. Cal State also would get a one-time allocation of $325 million, which includes $150 million in federal funds for critical infrastruc­ture, maintenanc­e and renovation projects.

For California Community Colleges, Chancellor Eloy Ortiz Oakley praised proposed new investment­s in direct grants, support services, workforce training, diversity programs and college affordabil­ity.

“The Governor’s revised budget plan leverages an historic level of revenue to create lasting opportunit­ies for community college students and will power the economic recovery that makes our state stronger and more equitable,” Oakley said in a statement.

Newsom’s proposals to help lower the cost of college drew praise from both students and equity advocates.

Aidan Arasasingh­am, UC Student Assn. president, said students were especially excited by Newsom’s proposals to fund more affordable housing and permanentl­y continue state financial aid for summer school classes, which was extended two years ago.

“By directly addressing high costs of education while bolstering financial aid and basic needs support, this budget will make UC more affordable, accessible, and excellent for all,” Arasasingh­am said.

Laura Szabo-Kubitz of the Institute for College Access and Success said Newsom’s proposed investment­s would help put higher education within reach for all students. She and other equity advocates, however, urged greater investment­s in the Cal Grant program to widen access to more students, as the California Student Aid Commission and legislator­s are proposing.

Newsom also proposed substantia­l funding for K-12 programs. They include:

8 $1 billion annually for additional after-school and summer programs in low-income communitie­s — building up to $5 billion.

8 $4 billion for youth mental health.

8 $3 billion for “community schools,” where education is integrated with healthcare.

8 A $500 college savings account for students from a low-income family with an additional $500 for foster and homeless youth.

Newsom noted Friday that the base per-pupil funding rise to about $14,000 per student is about double the level of a decade ago.

With the addition of ongoing and one-time federal funding, the total rises above $20,000 per student — at least for the immediate term.

 ?? David Butow For The Times ?? CALIFORNIA public colleges and universiti­es, such as UC Berkeley, seen in 2017, will get a boost under the governor’s budget.
David Butow For The Times CALIFORNIA public colleges and universiti­es, such as UC Berkeley, seen in 2017, will get a boost under the governor’s budget.

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