Finally, A Real Chance for Public Higher Education Reform in California

As a recent graduate of San Francisco State University, I am thrilled that there is finally momentum gaining in the movement to achieve real public higher education reform in California. In particular, the Middle Class Scholarship Act is an economically feasible way to make public higher education more affordable for all Californians.

While I was a student at SFSU my tuition increased every semester. To make matters worse, I never qualified for financial assistance to help fund my education because the State determined that my parents could afford to pay not only my tuition but also those of both of my sisters.

California’s public college students are continuing to struggle. The CSU Board of Trustees’ recent decision to close Spring 2013 enrollment is just one of the devastating blows that our public higher education students have been forced to endure, with no end in sight.

Luckily, help for California’s public university students and their families could be on the way. The Middle Class Scholarship Act recently proposed by California State Assembly Speaker John A. Perez is exactly the kind of public higher education reform that California’s students and their families need in these difficult financial times.

If it is approved by two-thirds of the California State Legislature, the Middle Class Scholarship Act will provide scholarships to approximately 150,000 CSU students and roughly 42,000 UC students who have family incomes less than $150,000 and whom do not already have their fees covered. These Middle Class Scholarships will slash student fees by two-thirds. Additionally, our California Community Colleges will receive $150 million to address their unique needs. The Middle Class Scholarships will be paid for in full by closing a wasteful corporate loophole that only benefits out-of-state businesses.  

The Middle Class Scholarship is an innovative solution to California’s public higher education crisis that will help students achieve their dreams, while at the same time, ensure that our Golden State has a strong workforce that is prepared to meet the challenges of the 21st century economy.

I know that as a student, it is difficult just to make time to study and to work but I strongly urge all of California’s UC, CSU and Community College Students to do whatever they can to help pass the Middle Class Scholarship Act and to fight for the higher education reform they deserve. From signing and sharing this petition and tweeting and posting Facbook messages to your State legislators and Governor Brown (if you don’t know who your State legislators are, you can look them up here) to organizing on campus and gathering signatures, no action is too small or insignificant. Keep the faith and, most importantly, keep making your voices heard.

Please embrace the help of the politicians who want to help The Middle Class Scholarship Act become law. Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, Speaker Perez, Senators Darrell Steinberg, and Leland Yee and many other State leaders have consistently stood in solidarity with California’s college students and have fought tirelessly against every single higher education budget cut and fee increase. To pass the Middle Class Scholarship Act, the support and expertise of these politicians will be invaluable.    

If California’s public college students continue to come together and rally the support of our State legislators to pass the Middle Class Scholarship Act, I think we will finally see the dawn of real public higher education reform in California.

4 thoughts on “Finally, A Real Chance for Public Higher Education Reform in California”

  1. As long as it’s JUST for CSU and UC I’ll support it

    NOT for Private colleges or Universities

    But, one thing that should be ‘Reformed’ is the CSU and UC Boards of Trustees

    A bunch of rich campaign contributors

    Tjhey KEEP GIVING OBSCENE SALARIES to UC and CSU administrators !!

    I’m disappointer in Jerry Brown for not even Trying to stop this

    Has ‘Groovey Gavin’ Newsome said ANYTHING about this ??

    How about our Legislative ‘leaders’ ?

    The systems that exploit students and professors in order to enrich Adminsitrators/Chancellors is ROTTEN

    I’ve got one daughter in SF State and one just accepted by UC Davis

    This could be a wonderful system, but the political clowns running our state have turned higher education into another scam for political insiders

    And like everything else, the California electorate wants ‘Something for Nothing’  aka ‘Supply Side Economics’

  2. I was thinking something along the lines of “California will make the student loan payments of California residents”, in the form of a refundable tax credit for student loan payments, would be a great incentive for a) alleviating the burden of student loan debt, b) encouraging California’s college graduates to stay here (as well for graduates of other states to come here).  

  3. I support the Speaker’s proposal, but I’m disheartened by the fact that this is another legislative gimmick to tap a specific revenue source to fund a specific spending program.

    Unfortunately, it’s the only game left in Sacramento, where a Republican Politburo rules with its minority choke-hold on revenue bills.

    This kind of patch-work funding (whether by the legislature or by voter initiatives) has got to be replaced by rational, long-range budgeting. That won’t happen until we repeal the 2/3 vote requirement for revenue increases… or vote the Republican anti-tax pledgers into permanent third-party obscurity.

    Until then, I’ll vote for whatever it takes to support California’s college students.

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