CO U R I ER Pasadena City College
Serving PCC Since 1915
ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT PCCCOURIER.COM
JULY 7, 2016 VOLUME 114 ISSUE 01
Metro ditches ITAP program John Orona Editor-in-Chief
PUNDITS CLASH AT POLITICON pg. 6
Budget threatens campus future
John Orona Editor-in-Chief
The Board of Trustees has adopted a new tentative budget for the 2016-2017 academic year, and although the over $159 million in appropriations is in line with last year’s historically high budget, the details may foreshadow future fiscal frustrations. In December the sales tax portion of Prop 30, the school-funding measure also known as the Educational Protection Act (EPA), will expire costing the college over $1 million. This is just the beginning of the affect the cessation of the EPA
will have on school budgets as the entire act is set to sunset the following year barring a voter extension. As Executive Director of Business Services Joe Simoneschi explained, “the difference of a little over a million dollars [between this year’s budget and last year’s] is primarily related to the reduction in funding because of the sales tax component of prop 30 ending in December of 2016.” Additionally, the school went without the $12.5 million in state-mandated one-time funds it was gifted last year. “[O]ur budget must accommodate an additional $12.4 million in ongoing expenses over and above
Katja Liebing/Courier Fireworks go off during the Americana Fest in Pasadena.
what we carried last year,” Simoneschi said. The largest driver of these new ongoing expenses is the recent deluge of new hires on campus. The over 50 new hires and their associated health and employer-mandated costs account for over $6 million in ongoing expenditures, which is almost half of the new expenses. To try to offset this, the school will reduce funding for adjunct instruction by nearly $2 million. “By bringing 50 new full-time faculty members onto our team, it is anticipated that we will not need to spend as much money on adjunct instruction during fiscal year 2016/2017,” Executive Director
of Strategic Communications and Marketing Alex Boekelheide wrote in an email to staff explaining the cost saving plan. “Division deans have been asked to adjust their teaching plans to reflect this reduction,” Boekelheide said. “We will also continue to refine our enrollment management efforts to ensure the most effective use of instructional funds.” According to Boekelheide, the college has also overspent on student workers and assistants for the last three years. In response, funding for student workers and college assistants has been extremely limited,
Brian Chernick Staff Writer
and documents, much of which were incorrect or out of date,” an overview of the new website states. “In addition, the site itself was using outdated technology, requiring a patchwork of fixes to keep it afloat.” The overview presented by the SCM team goes into detail on how the redesign required bringing together departments, students, faculty, and administrators to create a cohesive experience with accurate, up-to-date and accessible information. Alex Boekelheide, executive director of SCM, states that the need for an entire rethink was fueled by sentiments and criticism shared by students and faculty on the difficulty of navigating the now older website. “We had heard numerous times that the previous iteration of the site was difficult to navigate and hard to understand, with informa-
PCC’s popular Institutional Transit Access Pass (ITAP) program, which allowed students access to all Metro services throughout the semester for a one-time $30 fee expired May 31. In a Board of Directors meeting May 26 Metro voted to replace the old program, which was designed to increase student ridership while remaining revenue neutral, with the new Universal College Student Transit Pass (U-PASS) pilot program. Under this new program, possibly beginning Fall 2016, students with eight or more units will be able to purchase a tamper proof transit chip, like the ones used in regular TAP cards, that attaches to their student ID for no more than $43 per month. PCC is currently reviewing a plan to provide students with U-PASS chips for $85 per semester. The plan, although more expensive than the previous ITAP program, would save students with eight or more units over $200 every academic year and would save students with eight or fewer units over $600 every academic year compared to the
UPASS page 2
BUDGET page 2
New school website a decade in the making
It has been over a decade since Pasadena City College’s website had its last revision, but after four years of development the source for all things PCC received more than just a fresh coat of paint. The new site launched June 28 and boasts a new visual look, a refined user interface, additional features, new content, and a more responsive design that fluidly adjusts based on the size of the screen from where the site is being viewed. According to the department of Strategic Communications and Marketing (SCM), the overhaul included a massive cleanup, sifting through tens of thousands of pages and documents, getting the content up to date or, in a lot of cases, removed entirely from the site. “By Spring of 2016, the [PCC] website had over 33,000 pages
WEBSITE page 2
BADMINTON WINS STATE Badminton team struggles in doubles, excels in singles page 7
FRESH PASADENA PIZZA The Pizza Press offers pie right around the corner page 6