09.05.2012 Volume CXXIII Issue 1
AMPAGE The Student-Run Newspaper of Fresno City College
Budget Outlook Uncertain
STUDENT GOVERNMENT IN VIOLATION
BY KAITLIN REGAN
kregan@therampageonline.com
The budget situation for the State Center Community College District can be described as tentative at best and Fresno City College is preparing for the worstcase scenario. The budget is currently projected at $66.6 million, a $2.7 million reduction from the 2011-2012 academic year. Cheryl Sullivan, vice president of Administrative Services and current accounting supervisor, said the college is “definitely not in a preferred position.” “The state of California right now doesn’t have the money,” Sullivan said. “We’re in the same place that everybody else in the state is.” Sullivan also said that the budget situation is affecting opportunities at FCC and impacting instructors, particularly “parttime adjuncts who no longer have positions as well.” Lynn Campbell, a representative of the Academic Union, states that life for adjunct instructors is becoming more difficult due to the cuts. She added that it is the adjunct instructors that carry the campus. “Many programs on campus are built on the shoulders of adjunct instructors,” Campbell said. “As cuts are made, these instructors lose classes and therefore lose income. In addition, the programs suffer as well.” Campbell added that the students are feeling the cuts more than anyone else. With the cuts impacting the availability of classes, students are not getting into the courses that they need to finish their education. “Additional cuts will continue to decimate adjunct instructors, programs, and students who need classes to graduate,” said Campbell. Deborah Blue, chancellor of the State Center Community College District expressed frustration at having to cut necessary services to students. “We have tried to keep the cuts we’ve had to make as far away from our students as possible, but continued decreases in state funding have forced us to cut almost 2,500 classes and we have almost 3,000 students on wait-lists,” she said. “Our enrollment has been forced down by 11.5 percent since the 2008-09 academic year.” To make matters worse, the present budget is subject to change depending on the outcome of the November election, particularly the vote on Proposition 30, the ballot initiative to maintain funding for community colleges. If it passes, Proposition 30 gives 11 percent of revenue generated from a 0.25 percent tax increase to California community colleges. Sullivan says that the college l SEE BUDGET ON PAGE 2
Senator James Demaree sits at the conference table second from the right as ASG votes to move forward with the impeachment process against him. Photo by Abel Cortez. BY TROY POPE
tpope@therampageonline.com
Did the Associated Student Government violate the First Amendment rights of an elected senator by suspending him for voicing dissent on YouTube? Did the organization violate the California Brown Act in the conduct of its meetings? ASG Senator James Demaree was suspended from the organization by Advisor Sean Henderson on Aug. 23, the same day that he posted a YouTube video in which he criticized ASG and several of its members. Henderson notified Demaree of the suspension via email. The email read, “Due to your recent actions, you are hereby suspended from performing any ASG ac-
tivities until further notice. This includes attending any campus committee meetings on behalf of ASG or entrance into the ASG offices.” Demaree’s comments and allegations on YouTube may have been controversial and possibly unwarranted, but according to state law, he cannot legally be penalized for his actions. The California Education code 66301(a) states, “Neither the Regents of the University of California, the Trustees of the California State University, the governing board of a community college district, nor an administrator of any campus of those institutions, shall make or enforce a rule subjecting a student to disciplinary sanction solely on the basis of conduct that is speech or other communication that,
when engaged in outside a campus of those institutions, is protected from governmental restriction by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or Section 2 of Article I of the California Constitution.” The provision protects students from being penalized by a school for exercising their legal right to free speech. Furthermore, there is no language in ASG’s Constitution or By-Laws that grants Henderson the ability to suspend any member of the organization. Also, all infractions of the Student Standards of Conduct, the college’s rules which governs the appropriate behaviors of students and the subsequent disciplinary action the school takes thereafter, should go through l SEE VIOLATIONS ON PAGE 5
Changes To Financial Aid Cause Confusion BY OLGA VERKHOTINA
overkhotina@therampageonline.com
With the recent budget cuts, students at Fresno City College are scrambling to find a way to pay for their education and are seeking refuge in the Financial Aid office. Kira Tippins, director of Financial Aid, said that more than 60 percent of the student population is receiving, at least, a Board of Governors (BOG) fee waiver which pays the full cost of tuition. However, the cuts and proposals at the state level could greatly impact students this year. The most significant change that BOG fee waiver recipients now face is the increase in the minimum need required to be eligible for the award. When the students fill out their
Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), they get an Expected Family Contribution (EFC) value. Factors like the size of the household, the income level of the student and parents, the amount of taxes paid, and parents’ age determine the EFC number. “That EFC is then used against the cost of attendance,” said Tippins. The cost of attendance depends on whether the student is going to school fulltime or part-time, lives with or without parents as well as other expenses related to college education. So, the need is calculated by subtracting the EFC from the cost of attendance. Before July 1, 2012, the students only had to show at least $1 of need to
pay for their education. Now, they won’t receive a BOG fee waiver unless their need is $1,104 or greater. Tippins said this change was made because many students who didn’t have needs were dropping classes and still receiving the waiver. BOG fee waiver recipients will also have to maintain at least a 2.0 GPA to stay eligible after Gov. Brown signs SB 1456, the Student Success Act 2012. The California Senate has already adopted an amended version in the SB 1456 which was introduced by Sen. Lowenthal on Thursday, Aug. 30. “That’s the big change that would l SEE FINANCIAL AID ON PAGE 6