The Day

Students protest community college cuts

At Three Rivers, they join faculty in speaking against scaled-back services

- By GREG SMITH Day Staff Writer

— Lily Bentley of Norwich says community college students in the state are being held back because of budget cuts in the newly merged community college system.

Bentley joined about 50 fellow students and faculty members outside Three Rivers Campus of Connecticu­t State Community College on Monday to voice disappoint­ment in budget cuts at Three Rivers that she and others said have resulted in scaledback hours in the library, bookstore and cafeteria, along with a reduction in tutoring services and student work hours.

The group of protesters held signs, chanted and delivered remarks calling on the governor and state legislatur­es to address a budget deficit they said is stripping amenities from students, many of whom are non-traditiona­l, have full-time jobs or are taking care of children and in many cases are the first member of their family to attend college.

“It is a commonly emphasized mantra that the smartest decision to make as someone going to college is to begin at community college. The lower tuition allows students who would never be able to afford to go to college to receive a higher education like myself,” Bentley said. “What I didn’t know was how compromise­d my college career would be because I go to Three Rivers.”

Bentley, a first-generation college student, is a second year student at Three Rivers who is seeking a degree in environmen­tal engineerin­g and technology and serves as vice president of the Three Rivers United Environmen­talists.

Last year, Three Rivers was one of the state’s 12 community colleges to merge into one entity known as Connecticu­t State Community College, the result of years of discussion­s to address declining enrollment­s and financial concerns at community colleges.

The CSCU Board of Regents in December, facing a $140 million projected shortfall for fiscal year 2025 in part because of the expiration of pandemic relief funds, approved a 5% tuition hike to try and help close the gap. The increase goes into effect in the fall. The increase will result in annual tuition at community colleges going from $4,972 to $5,218.

Three Rivers professor Diba Khan-Bureau, the coordinato­r of Three Rivers’ environmen­tal engineerin­g technology program who helped organize Monday’s protest, called cutbacks “an injustice for our students” and blamed the governor and state legislator­s.

“What was supposed to save the state of Connecticu­t millions of dollars only has led to costly increases, ” Khan-Bureau said of the merger. “Our students are going to bear the brunt of this mismanaged bureaucrat­ic system.”

State Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, co-chair of the General Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee, said that the governor’s overall budget has more funding for the CSCU system as well as PACT (Pledge to Advance CT) funding to provide financial assistance but that the legislatur­e is obligated to stay within the confines of the “fiscal guardrails” implemente­d by the legislatur­e last year that imposes a spending cap and limits overall spending.

Osten said she is sympatheti­c to college students, especially those attending community colleges, since they are usually working, sometimes two jobs, while attending school.

“We want to make sure we are providing as many resources as we can,” Osten said.

Osten said part of the problem with community colleges and universiti­es alike, except at the University of Connecticu­t, is a drop in student enrollment and a correspond­ing decrease in revenue from tuition.

Baylee Gagnier of Montville, who is graduating from Three Rivers with a degree in environmen­tal engineerin­g and technology and a certificat­e in occupation­al health and management, serves as a teaching assistant and works for the on-campus tutoring center.

“Being a student at Three Rivers for the past two years, I have been able to witness first-hand the decline of my college in multiple aspects due to these budget cuts,“Gagnier said.

One example, Gagnier said, is the community food pantry, whose hours were cut and is now closed on Fridays and has a “devastatin­g impact that people don’t notice or take into considerat­ion.”

Monday’s protest was supported by labor unions representi­ng the community college faculty and staff.

Sam Norton, a spokespers­on for Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es, said students, faculty and staff at the community colleges, the four state universiti­es, and Charter Oak State College have voiced opinions “about how the difficult steps we have taken to close our budget deficit have negatively affected their overall academic experience and outcomes.”

“These spending reductions have resulted in reduced student and food services, larger class sizes, and program reductions. This legislativ­e session, the Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es (CSCU) system has asked the legislatur­e for an additional $47.6 million in funding, which includes $41.3 million for CT State Community College,” Norton said.

“This funding will allow us to further invest in our greatest asset – our students – by ensuring they have access to the resources and support systems needed to succeed. CSCU continues to have positive conversati­ons with lawmakers, the Governor’s Office, and the Office of Policy and Management about the importance of investing in higher education,” Norton said.

Community colleges now part of the newly merged system are located in Enfield, Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, Manchester, Middletown, Waterbury, Danielson, Winsted, Norwich and Farmington. There are 85,000 students enrolled in community colleges and state universiti­es governed by the new entity, and 42% of them are Black or Hispanic.

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 ?? PHOTOS BY SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Above and below, students march during a protest at Connecticu­t State Community College Three Rivers campus in Norwich on Monday.
PHOTOS BY SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Above and below, students march during a protest at Connecticu­t State Community College Three Rivers campus in Norwich on Monday.

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