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Community colleges in US facing massive cutbacks
Michigan highlights assault on education
By Charles Bogle
20 May 2003
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The author teaches at a community college in Michigan.
For someone who has promised to leave no child behind, President
George W. Bush is certainly doing his best to keep Americas
children from getting ahead, especially those who come from a
working class background.
Drastic cuts in higher education funding, coupled with recession-fed
decreases in revenues, not to mention the costs of Bushs
tax cuts and imperialist ventures, have severely undermined the
nations community college system. This is imperiling both
recent high school graduates and those who, in an effort to retrain
themselves, must attend college if they are to have any hope of
escaping the Dantesque descent into a life of low wages, no health
care and social misery.
Bush is getting plenty of help on the state level from Democrats.
In Michigan, a state with a tradition of supporting public education,
Democratic Governor Jennifer Granholms recently announced
slashing of community college funding threatens to close the only
door to higher education available to many working class youth.
An e-mail message from the Michigan Education Association announced
that the federal governments proposed fiscal budget cuts
for 2004 include the elimination of 45 education programs. Compared
to 2003, these cuts will decrease the education budget by $1.56
billion.
Moreover, the fiscal crisis facing the stateswhich are
in the most financially desperate situation since the Great Depressionhas
resulted in a dramatic shrinking of state funding for public services
and projects.
On February 19, Governor Granholm issued an executive order
to balance the 2003 budget. Spending for universities and community
colleges will be reduced by 3.5 percent for the 2002-03 budget
year. When the legislatures Appropriations Committee asked
whether these would be the final cuts in the 2002-2003 budget
year, Budget Director Mary Lannoye said they would be, if current
revenue projections held. Already, however, January revenue estimates
have proven to be too optimistic, leaving school administrators
wondering when the next cut will be announced.
The community college cuts for the 2003-2004 budget year have
already been announced, and at 6.7 percent they are more than
twice those announced for the current budget year. Taken together,
the announced cuts for 2003 and 2004 amount to 10.2 percent.
The consequences for Michigans 28 community colleges
will likely vary, depending upon the financial position of each
one, but every institution will be affected. Some of Michigans
community colleges are fortunate enough to have a solid property
tax base, and therefore are not so dependent on state funding.
For example, at Monroe County Community College, the nearby
Enrico Fermi atomic power plant and a growing population have
resulted in increased property tax revenues over the past decade.
For this reason, the school receives approximately 18 percent
of its funding from the state. In dollar terms, the 2003-2004
budget cuts will result in a loss of approximately $450,000not
enough to necessitate closing the colleges doors or laying
off full-time faculty (yet), but enough to force cutbacks in library
and tutoring services and freeze hiring of full-time faculty at
a time when the college has already failed to replace five full-time
professors lost over the past four years.
The situation is much worse at tiny Gogebic Community College,
located in Michigans Upper Peninsula, which receives over
60 percent of its funding from the state. Many state college officials
are openly wondering whether it will remain open. (One indication
of Gogebics precarious situation is that it was the only
Michigan community college spared a reduction in its At-Risk funding).
These cutbacks are coming at a time when four-year colleges
and universities continue to raise their tuition and drive working
class students away from their classrooms. Nationwide, over the
past few years unparalleled costs have convinced large numbers
of prospective working class students that applying to the better
four-year colleges is an exercise in futility.
According to a May 13 article in the Detroit Free Press,
a recent study by the Century Foundation (a Washington, DC public
policy think tank), found that literally thousands of academically
qualified-low income students dont even apply to the
better, more expensive colleges because they cant afford
them. How many more low-income students will decide against a
good college when they learn of the proposed tuition increases
projected for this fall?
In Michigan alone, newspapers are predicting 10-20 percent
tuition increases this fall. Michigan Technical University, Saginaw
Valley State University, and Oakland University have recently
announced tuition increases of more than 10 percent, for example.
The states other four-year universities are expected to
make similar projections.
Working class youth, already struggling to make ends meet while
attending college, will be required to take on even greater workloads
while attending community colleges. I teach at a community college,
and at the beginning of each semester, I ask my students, How
many of you work? How many hours a week? Out of 25-30 students
per class, only one or two do not raise their hand, and of those
who do raise their hand, many are working 40 or more hours a week.
Moreover, because wages are minimal and so few full-time jobs
are available, the 40 or more hours are accumulated at two to
three part-time jobs.
As you might guess, a number of my students, sometimes as many
as a third of a class, either drop out because of work and academic
conflicts, or are simply there because they cannot afford health
insurance and are still living with parents whose insurance covers
the students medical expenses. In addition, the financial
aid they receive requires them to carry full course loads.
In the end, most of these students earn lower final grades
than they might have had they been able to devote more time to
their studies. National reports bear witness to this problem.
In an April 16, 2002 USA Today article entitled College
Students Feeling Crunch of Longer Work Hours, Mary Beth
Marklein wrote that more full-time college students are
working longer hours than five years ago. She said nearly
half who work more than 25 hours per week contend their jobs are
disrupting their academic progress.
For many Michigan community college students, as well as for
large numbers of community college students across the country,
greater sacrifices will not result in achieving greater social
mobility or receiving an outstanding liberal arts education. Rather,
the cutbacks in funding, coupled with the growing community college
focus on job training, will reverse the gains made by the working
class during the golden era of community college education
in the 1960s and 1970s. During those years, a large number of
working class youth, many of whom were Vietnam veterans going
to school under the GI Bill of Rights, attended and transferred
from community colleges to four-year institutions, where they
earned baccalaureate and post-graduate degrees. This allowed them
to lead better and more productive lives.
However, today the emphasis is on terminal degree programs
in the so-called high tech area (a euphemism in many
cases for service sector jobs) and security or law enforcement
positions. In many Michigan community colleges, general degree
requirements now include computer courses, but not political science.
Tech days become a yearly ritual, but Liberal
Arts Days do not, and what were once foreign language labs
are now distance learning centers.
Just south of Michigan, in Ohio, Owens Community College has
installed a Homeland Security Degree Program. Given the market-driven
business model that has been pushed on community colleges,
Michigan community colleges will no doubt have to get their own
homeland security departments in order to compete. But what will
our working class students do when, after having received a program
degree or certificate in a defunct or saturated field, they are
forced to compete with a graduate of a good liberal arts college
for a job that requires an education rather than training?
Announcing her budget cuts, Governor Granholm, said, This
proposal is the first step in addressing our structural deficit.
Everyone will unfortunately have to share the pain of cuts.
She added, These proposed reductions represent the best
of a dark situation.
If this is the best of a dark situation, one can only wonder
how dark the present and future situation for community colleges
must be.
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