Across the state, California community college officials and student activists have held coordinated protests. With the usual claimed victim status, they demand higher taxes to subsidize their academic fantasyland.
But these bureaucrats fail to tell the full story. It’s the CA community college STUDENTS (who benefit the most from the education) who should be paying more for their education — they’ve been over-subsidized long enough.
According to a March 2010 national tuition survey sponsored by Washington state, California has the lowest community college tuition and fees in the country. Even with the increase in per credit tuition from $26 to $36, CA community colleges STILL charge students the lowest tuition — students are paying about a third of the national community college tuition average.
Based on a 15 credit (five course) semester, 2009-10 CA community college tuition and fees equaled $780. Next lowest was New Mexico at $1,125. Third lowest was North Carolina at $1,684. National average was $3,029. The highest state is New Hampshire which charges $6,262.
Adjusting for the new increased $36 per credit CA community college fee, we find that CA community college cost rises to $1,080. Even assuming a zero percent increase in student charges for the rest of the nation’s community colleges — a CA community college tuition is STILL the lowest in the nation.
This ridiculously low tuition devalues education to students. This results in a 30+ percent drop rate for class completion — a course that starts off with 30 students finishes the semester with (on average) only 21 students.
It gets worse. A full two-thirds of California community college students pay no out-of-pocket tuition at all. They fill out a simple unverified “hardship” form that exempts them from any tuition payment, or they receive grants and tax credits for their full tuition.
On top of that, California offers thousands of absolutely free adult continuing education classes – a sop to the upper middle class. In San Diego, over 1,400 classes for everything from baking pastries to ballroom dancing are offered totally at taxpayer expense.
It’s time to end this madness. Raise our CA student tuition to at least the national community college average. Let those that benefit the most from a community college education pay their fair share for that education. The LAST thing this recession-weary state needs is even higher taxes.