Community colleges have had massive decline in enrollments. From EdSource:Angeles City College Library.
“Enrollment at California’s community colleges dipped below 2 million students for the first time in at least three decades, the result of a pandemic that has upended education across the country. The drop across the 116-college system, at nearly 15%, is higher than what was reported by the system earlier this year for the fall 2020 semester.
The system, beset by chronic data issues that have stymied its ability to accurately track enrollment during a critical period, on Wednesday said its enrollment for the 2020-21 school year was down 318,800 students, or 14.8%, from the prior year. That puts its student enrollment at 1,833,843, down from 2,152,643 students in 2019-20.”
So what do you do when you product is not being bought? If you are government in Sacramento you have the colleges become real estate developers and build housing. Looks like another union/corporation scam to make money from the taxpayer. Maybe if the community colleges provided a product that was worthy, students will attend. But after two years of being scammed, they now realize these colleges are not worth the time or money. Lets be honest—admit the colleges are failing and turn the college system in a housing system
California selects colleges for first round of grants to expand affordable student housing
Legislature will need to approve list by this summer
ASHLEY A. SMITH, EdSource, 3/3/22
San Francisco State University campus.
A handful of community colleges and universities are on the shortlist to possibly receive the state’s first batch of affordable student housing grants.
California’s Department of Finance, in a letter to the Legislature on Tuesday, recommended that five community colleges, UCLA, UC San Diego, San Francisco State and San Diego State receive a piece of nearly $480 million to create affordable housing for 3,545 students. The community colleges are Imperial Valley, Fresno City, College of the Siskiyous, Ventura and Sierra colleges.
The final list will be approved by the state Legislature by June.
Under the recommended project list, San Francisco State would receive the largest share at $116.3 million to build new residential housing for 750 students.
“With rent prices in San Francisco, I’m not surprised we made the list,” said Barry Jodatian, associate vice president of capital planning, design and construction for the California State University campus.
Last year, the Legislature and the Governor’s Office created the $2 billion Higher Education Student Housing Grant Program. The Legislature approved $500 million in one-time money to go to the program this year to construct affordable student housing or renovate commercial properties to provide low-cost housing.
In October, the University of California, CSU and the community colleges submitted 42 projects totaling about $2.8 billion to be considered for the funding — far more than money available. In January, Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed approving $750 million for the grant program next year.
San Francisco has one of the most expensive rental markets in the country. As of February, the average price for a one-bedroom apartment in the Bay Area city is $2,930 a month, according to rental listings site Zumper. A two-bedroom apartment averages $3,930 a month.
San Francisco State’s affordable housing plan would add a new residential hall to the campus for 750 new low-income, first-year students. Rent in the proposed dorm, which would house three students to a unit, would be about $845 a month or $7,600 an academic year.
But even adding nearly 800 more beds to the campus won’t solve the school’s housing problems. More than 2,500 students were wait-listed this year for housing, Jodatian said.
The new affordable housing grant doesn’t completely cover the building cost of San Francisco State’s or other colleges’ projects. Jodatian said the San Francisco campus would use dollars from bonds the CSU system regularly issues for housing to cover the rest.
Fresno State didn’t make the recommended project list but could see funding in the future as the grant program continues. The campus has a 250-person waitlist for residential housing and proposed a $48 million plan to add 225 beds.
Debbie Adishian-Astone said campus officials are optimistic that future legislation, like Assembly Bill 1602, will help the universities and colleges solve the affordable housing problem for the state’s students.
AB 1602, proposed by Assemblyman Kevin McCarty, a Sacramento Democrat, creates a $5 billion fund to provide zero-interest loans to UC, CSU and community colleges to build affordable housing for faculty, staff and students.
“That’s a game-changer for higher ed,” Adishian-Astone said of the bill. “If we can get this support from the state, it allows us to keep rent affordable.”
As for the eight projects recommended by the state Finance Department, if the Legislature approves that list by June, campuses could start breaking ground as early as December.
According to the letter to the Legislature, in addition to SF State, funding is proposed for seven other projects:
- UC San Diego would receive $100 million for 1,100 additional beds.
- UCLA would receive $35 million for 358 more beds.
- Imperial Valley College and San Diego State would share $8.86 million for a joint project to add 51 affordable beds.
- Fresno City College could see about $34 million for 360 beds.
- College of the Siskiyous would add 252 beds for about $32.6 million.
- Ventura College could see nearly $63 million for 320 beds.
- Sierra College would see about $80.5 million for 354 additional beds.
An additional 69 community colleges are recommended to share in $18 million in planning grants for possible future projects. Two of them — Butte and Merced colleges — would plan with neighboring universities.