CORPORATE EDUCATION REFORM HITS SAN FRANCISCO COMMUNITY COLLEGE
By David Bacon
Truthout Report
http://truth-out.org/news/item/15213-corporate-education-reform-hits-san-francisco-community-college

SAN FRANCISCO, CA  (3/18/13) - On March 14, the day before the 
Trustees at San Francisco Community College District handed in the 
report that may decide the life or death of California's largest 
community college, student and faculty marchers headed downtown to 
City Hall.  A sinuous line of hundreds of chanting, banner-waving 
people stopped traffic on Mission Street, the main artery through the 
city barrio. Their mood combined equal parts of desperation at the 
prospect of the closure of the school, and anger and defiance at the 
kinds of changes that authorities are demanding to keep it open.

Shanell Williams, urban studies major and president of the Associated 
Students at SFCC, told a rally at the march's starting point on the 
college's Mission campus that the required changes are part of a 
larger effort to turn students into commodities, and move towards the 
privatization of education.  "Next year students will be affected by 
the Student Success Act," she warned.  "Every student will have to 
have an education plan, there will be repeat limits, and a 90-credit 
cap on the Board of Governors fee waiver [that allows poor and 
working class students to petition to waive tuition fees].  Now is 
the time when they need more student services and support from the 
administration, but they're cutting part time counselors and taking 
other actions that will be even greater barriers."



Closing San Francisco Community College became a possibility last 
spring when the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior 
Colleges sent a team to San Francisco, as part of a 6-year 
accreditation cycle.  The district, the largest public school system 
in California, had been warned earlier about deficiencies and knew 
there would be problems.  With 85,000 students and 1650 faculty, and 
an annual operating budget of $200 million, SFCC had never been 
sanctioned.  But under the impact of cuts in state funding, last year 
it had a deficit of $6 million.

In July, commissioners released a set of findings that found the 
district deficient in 14 areas, and put it on "Show Cause" status, 
the most serious sanction short of shutting down the college 
entirely.  The commission gave the college credit for a very diverse 
faculty and high-quality libraries and counseling.  Commissioners 
said, however, the college's governance, planning and leadership were 
inefficient, and that it had not documented adequately a set of 
assessments called "Student Learning Outcomes."



Finally, the commissioners said the district fiscal planning was 
poor.  Over the past three years of the state's fiscal crisis San 
Francisco has endured a $53 million loss in revenue.  Despite it, 
teachers and previous chancellors worked to maintain an adequate and 
accessible class level, and avoided layoffs through temporary cuts 
and concessions.  But commissioners found there had not been enough 
cuts or cancelled classes, that too much (92%) of the budget was 
spent on personnel, and that too few administrators were on staff.

After the commission made its report, California Community Colleges 
Chancellor Jack Scott went before the SFCC board of trustees, and as 
students hissed told them that "what you have to do is do less than 
you did three years ago. There's no other way."  Scott admitted "all 
the community colleges have been faced with this very same problem." 
Statewide, community colleges have incurred $809 million in cuts 
since 2008-09.



But many faculty and students believe that California's multiyear 
economic crisis is being used to enforce a series of changes intended 
to move the community college system towards privatization, and 
attack unions as obstacles that stand in the way.  "In this worldview 
education reformers are beginning to look at higher education like 
K-12, and propose similar measures," says Alisa Messer, president of 
the faculty union at SFCC, Local 2121 of the American Federation of 
Teachers. 

"They see community colleges as a means to turn out hirable people, 
or students for four-year institutions.  We see them as institutions 
serving the broader community.  Our students move in and out, they 
have jobs and kids, some are learning English-as-a-Second-Language, 
while others are seniors interested in lifelong learning.  Not 
everyone is coming for a degree.  We need an accreditation process 
that takes this diversity into account."



In an effort to comply with the accreditation commission's demands, 
however, the district brought in the Fiscal Crisis & Management 
Assistance Team (FCMAT), a quasi-state agency, to make 
recommendations for fiscal reforms.  In a January 31, 2013 report the 
district lists FCMAT's demands.  They dovetail with the changes 
demanded by the accreditation commission.

FCMAT told the district that subsidies for some education programs 
needed by students should be cut.  Over the past several decades the 
district has encouraged enrollment by establishing 11 campuses and a 
number of other centers.  FCMAT told it to "evaluate the cost 
effectiveness and service requirements of the college centers to 
determine the best future use" and to "eliminate some of the outreach 
locations."  Overall, it said one important goal was to "reduce the 
number of full-time faculty through attrition."



FCMAT further told the district to take a hard line against its 
faculty and classified workers and their unions.  For teachers it 
suggested "negotiating reductions to the AFT contract provisions that 
provide benefits and compensation that may not be sustainable in the 
current economic environment, including compensation for tenure 
review committee members and mentors and generous categories of 
employee leave."  The district responded that it would demand 
"rolling back pay schedules, reducing the cost of health benefits, 
reducing the cost per hour for part time faculty, and/or reducing or 
eliminating the cost of part-time faculty health benefits."

For the janitors, instructional aides, food service workers and other 
non-teachers, FCMAT told SFCC to "eliminate contract provisions that 
are out of the ordinary, and that increase costs" including "wellness 
payments ... substantial paid time off, a 37..5 hour workweek, and 
high levels of ... vacation and compensatory time."



Last July Local 2121 and the district agreed to emergency measures to 
meet the fiscal crisis caused by the loss of state funding, including 
a 2.85% wage cut for the 2012-2013 school year.  Afterwards faculty 
and students hit the road to campaign for state Proposition 30, to 
prevent further funding cuts, and citywide Proposition A, intended to 
plug the hole in the district budget.

The political leaders who placed the measure on the ballot, including 
district trustee Anne Grier, said in their ballot argument that funds 
from Proposition A would be used to: "maintain core academic courses, 
including English, math, and science; provide workforce training, 
including nursing, engineering, business, and technology; provide an 
education that prepares students for four-year universities;  keep 
City College libraries and student support services open; keep 
technology and instructional support up to date, and offset State 
budget cuts."



The district produced budget projections, given to the union and 
public, that sought to show the possible results of the passage of 
the propositions, as well as their defeat.  In the worst case, if 
both 30 and A failed, the district projected a shortfall of $24.5 
million.  But if both passed, it said, there would be a small surplus 
of $726,658.

In November voters responded, passing Prop. 30.  Prop. A won with 73% 
of the vote.  In December, however, district negotiators announced 
that the administration would impose a 4.4% "annualized" wage cut on 
faculty, retroactive to July, when the 2.85% cut took effect. 
Together they would effectively cut salaries by 8.8% through next 
July.  The district refused to bargain, and when union negotiators 
persisted in demanding explanations, a new budget projection was 
produced.  On the line where the predicted income from Proposition A 
had been listed previously there was nothing.



After further prodding, the district announced that all Proposition A 
money would be used to increase the district's reserves, and better 
fund pension liabilities.  The administration claimed this was a 
mandate from the ACCJC, and what voters thought they were voting for 
was irrelevant.

This fulfilled another set of FCMAT demands, which included, "If the 
election results are positive...fund ongoing obligations such as 
retiree health benefits and workers' compensation."  It told the 
district to "become more aggressive in reducing expenditures," and to 
"plan for and make permanent reductions."

Student enrollment has been falling as a result of the economic 
crisis, but began falling much faster when class cuts and a possible 
closure made them extremely insecure.  That in turn caused the 
district's income to fall as well.  FCMAT response was to tell the 
district to buy a new computer software system, called Banner 
software, to keep better track of enrollment.



In an effort to show its willingness to obey the accreditation 
commission and FCMAT dictates, in October the board hired a "special 
trustee" with the power to veto decisions he feels jeopardize the 
school's response, much as appointed "special managers" in Michigan 
today overrule decisions made by elected city councils.  The board 
chose Bob Agrella, past president of Santa Rosa City College, who 
promptly blamed the union for opposing the cuts and concessions.  Its 
objections were keeping the college from meeting ACCJC 
recommendations, he claimed, and accused it and students of trying to 
protect the system's nine campuses from closure.

When students and teachers marched through the city on March 14, they 
were protesting the way the fear of closure has been used to force 
through the ACCJC and FCMAT demands.  Shanell Williams angrily 
denounced the tactic as she spoke through the bullhorn at the Mission 
campus, surrounded by billowing banners saying, "Stop the 
Privatization of Education" and "We are All City College!"  "Students 
are scared about the future of the college," she shouted. "We need to 
have confidence that the administration will do what it takes to keep 
the college open, without squeezing out the most at-risk students or 
forcing extreme cuts on the faculty."

Sanctioning community colleges is growing beyond San Francisco, 
however - 27 districts in California (25% of the state total) are 
currently on the list.  Two have "Show Cause" orders that threaten 
closure, in addition to SFCC.  The accreditation commission is not a 
public agency, but a self-perpetuating private one, overseen by the 
Western Association of Schools and Colleges.  It is funded by 
educational institutions, which have no input or oversight rights. 



What gives its recommendations power is the U.S. Department of 
Education, which will only fund financial aid at accredited 
institutions.  Particularly for community colleges, whose student 
body is drawn overwhelmingly from working class communities, 
accreditation therefore becomes a life or death issue.  During the 
Obama administration, the department has put pressure on 
accreditation commissions to take a harder line on sanctions, 
concerned that students aren't receiving an education that enables 
them to get jobs and repay student loans. 

Robert Shireman, director of California Competes in San Francisco, 
and former deputy undersecretary of education in the Obama 
administration, told EdSource writer Lewis Freedberg that although 
the commissions need more enforcement tools other than forcing a 
closure, "At some point you have to let the hatchet fall."  At the 
same time, the administration has discounted traditional measures of 
quality education, such as low ratios of students to faculty and 
improving college curricula.  Instead it emphasizes making graduates 
attractive to corporate employers.

Faculty member and Local 2121 executive board member Allan Fisher 
marched with the students up Mission Street, and stood beside Shanell 
Williams as she denounced the cuts. "The source of the Federal 
government's pressure on the accreditation commissions' to sanction 
more colleges," he explained, "includes very wealthy activists like 
Bill Gates, who represent corporations and large foundations. Their 
efforts to 'improve accountability' through measured outcomes and the 
demand to push students through faster are likely to discourage 
students and limit educational opportunities."



Coming in 2013 from Beacon Press:
THE RIGHT TO STAY HOME:  Ending Forced Migration and the 
Criminalization of Immigrants



DISPLACED, UNEQUAL AND CRIMINALIZED - A Report for the Rosa Luxemburg 
Foundation on the political economy of immigration
http://www.rosalux-nyc.org/displaced-unequal-and-criminalized/



With Anoop Prasad on what's wrong with the current immigration reform 
proposals in Washington DC
http://www.kpfa.org/archive/id/88447
With Solange Echevarria of KWMR about growers push for guest worker 
programs. Advance to 88 minutes for the interview.
http://kwmr.org/blog/show/4156
At the Gandhi-King Youth and Community Conference, Memphis 2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1PXka-Sbq4&feature=player_embedded



See also Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and 
Criminalizes Immigrants  (Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2002

See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575

See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico Border 
(University of California, 2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html

Entrevista con activistas de #yosoy132 en UNAM
Interview by activists of #yosoy132 at UNAM (in Spanish)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyF6AJQa9po&feature=relmfu

Two lectures on the political economy of migration
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2GgDWf9eefE&feature=youtu.be
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pd4OLdaoxvg&feature=related

For more articles and images, see  http://dbacon.igc.org
-- 
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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