Contact your legislators today:
"Restore STATE CATEGORICAL FUNDING & increase CCC COLA"
BUDGET CUTS DRASTICALLY IMPACTED CALIFORNIA COMMUNITY COLLEGES DURING THE RECESSION.
♦ Funding for the California Community Colleges was cut $1.5 billion between the 2007-08 and 2011-12 academic years
(PPIC report).
♦ Course offerings statewide were cut by roughly 25 percent due to the five consecutive years of deep budget cuts.
♦ The cuts forced community colleges to ration course offerings and as a direct result,
nearly 500,000 students were shut out of the system.
Source: California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office (CCCCO) Key Facts, updated January 16, 2015.
CATEGORICAL FUNDING
Categorically funded programs are established by the California legislature to provide state mandated minimum standards to support highly specialized student support programs (known as categorical programs) and part-time faculty programs that serve specific campus needs or specific student groups.
Source: California Community College Chancellor's Office (CCCCO) Overview of Categorical Programs for California Community Colleges.
Categorical Program Funding Cut in 2009-10. In response to the state's fiscal condition, the 2009-10 Budget Act reduced ongoing Proposition 98 General Fund support for California Community College's (CCC's) categorical programs by $263 million (37 percent) compared with 2008-09. Of this amount, a total of $181 million (38 percent) was cut from student support categorical programs. Of CCC's eight student support categorical programs, two programs received a base cut of about 50 percent, five programs were cut roughly 40 percent, and one (Financial Aid Administration) received a slight augmentation.
Source: www.lao.ca.gov California Legislative Analyst's Office The 2014-15 Budget: Analysis of the Higher Education Budget.
COLA (Cost-of-Living Adjustment)
The adjustment known as COLA is intended to account for higher cost-of-living and is triggered when inflation goes up. The COLA for community colleges is the percentage change of the
Implicit Price Deflator for state and local government purchases of goods and services for the
United States, as published by the United States Department of Commerce. Education code
section 84750 (e) specifies that community colleges receive the same inflation adjustment as
required for school districts. Over the years,
COLA for California Community Colleges has been frozen, reduced, or eliminated, making it increasingly difficult to recruit, retain, and reward a teaching corps and staff support to deliver high quality education to
our community college students.
Source: California Community College Chancellor's Office (CCCCO) COLA History.
"Support the PART-TIME WORKERS BILL OF RIGHTS ACT"
Urge Congress to support H.R. 675, the "Part-Time Workers Bill of Rights Act." The bill is sponsored by Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) and it addresses coverage issues for
adjunct faculty in a number of federal labor laws.
The bill does three things: First, it would
extend the ACA’s [Affordable Care Act] employer responsibility requirement to include part-time workers. Large
employers that are required to offer health care to full-time employees or pay a penalty would
also have to offer health care to part-time workers or pay a pro rata penalty. Second, the bill
extends job-protected family and medical leave to part-time workers under the FMLA [Family and Medical Leave Act] and,
finally, it would require part-time workers to be treated like full-time workers for purposes of
participating in their employers' pension plan.
Source: House Education & the Workforce Committee Report, Office of George Miller, Senior Committee Democrat from California: "The Just–In–Time Professor"
The eForum, referenced in "The Just-In-Time Professor," was launched in November 2013 by the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Education & the Workforce Democrats. It invites adjunct faculty around the country to comment via email on their working conditions, how those conditions affect their ability to earn a living and have a successful career, and how those conditions may affect students and their attainment of educational goals.
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