The Mercury News

California offers $10,000 for public service

45 universiti­es will take part in the program starting in the fall semester

- By Jocely Gecker

Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced that 45 colleges and universiti­es in California, including some of the most prestigiou­s campuses in the state, will be part of a new public service program that will subsidize tuition for students who do community service alongside their studies.

The program. called California­ns For All College Corps, will start in the fall 2022 semester with 6,500 students who will be deployed to part-time work in areas of pressing need like K-12 education disparitie­s, climate change and food insecurity, Newsom said in a news conference with the leaders of the state’s public university and community college systems.

In exchange for 450 hours of service, those students will receive $10,000 toward their education and can get academic credit for their work.

Seven of the 10 University of California campuses will take part in the program this year, including UC Berkeley and UCLA, along with 16 of the 23 California State University schools and more than two dozen community and private colleges. The $146 million cost was approved as part of last year’s state budget.

The College Corps takes its inspiratio­n from national service programs that have helped participan­ts pay for education, like AmeriCorps and the GI Bill, said Josh Fryday, the state’s chief service officer and head of the new program.

“We are making it clear here in California, like the GI Bill, if you are willing to serve your community and give back in a meaningful way, we are going to help you pay for college,” Fryday said.

The program’s website outlines a competitiv­e applicatio­n process for the program that it says will focus on admitting low-income students and so-called dreamers — students whose parents brought them to the U.S. illegally — who are eligible for the program under a California law that

allows noncitizen­s to access in-state tuition if they graduated from a California high school and meet other criteria.

University of California President Michael V. Drake praised the program as a way to help thousands of students pay for college and reduce debt.

“California is and always should be a place where education turns dreams into reality, where people from all background­s and walks of life can succeed. Where we use our talents to make the world a better place,” Drake said.

Allowing students who are living in the country illegally to be eligible is a “very, very important” element of the program, said California State University Chancellor Joseph I. Castro. “This historic investment will help mitigate the disproport­ionate impacts of the pandemic on both students and communitie­s,” he said.

Newsom said if the program is successful it could be expanded to include more students and be replicated outside of California.

During this divisive era, the notion of public service and giving back to a larger community could help unify people, Newsom said.

“We’ve lost a connection to others. This is about forming stronger connection­s,” Newsom said. “If I could decide the future of this country, I would demand that all of us have some compulsory service and shared experience­s.”

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