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Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012
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Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Presentation available at scottlay.com

Looking AheadJoint Special Populations Advisory Committee

December 5, 2012

Page 2: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Topics

•Looking Back

•Looking Ahead

•Discussion

Page 3: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

1910Fresno becomes first

junior college after the Legislature authorizes high schools to offer

postsecondary courses

Page 4: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

1917Legislature enacts Junior College Act, extends courses of study to:

•mechanical and industrial arts

•household economy

•agriculture

•civic education and

•commerce.

Page 5: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

1921Legislature authorizes creation of local districts

•Organized under K-12 laws

•locally-elected governing boards

•State Department of Education to monitor

•Creation of Junior College Fund

•Nation’s first state funding

Page 6: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

1960• formally

recognized the three systems

• CCC mission: transfer, vocational and general ed

• 56 locally governed districts; 380,000 students

Page 7: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

1967

•Dept of Ed oversight deemed weak

•Board of Governors created

•“Bilateral governance”

•76 colleges, 610,000 students

Page 8: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

1970s - 1980s•1976 - Education Employment

Relations Act

•1978 - Proposition 13

•1984 - first enrollment fee

•1988 - AB 1725

•1988 - Proposition 98

The Era of Change

Page 9: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

1990s-2000s

•1991-94: Recession caused fee increases, cuts.

•1994-2000: Strong revenue growth increased Prop 98 guarantee, fast CCC growth.

•2001: Stock market collapse

•2008: Real estate, banking collapse

•Time of significant change.

Page 10: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

198061% white

CCC

Page 11: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

201269%

non-white

CCC

Page 12: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

ShiftHappens.Are we shifting accordingly?

Page 13: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Three Years of Change

•Dramatic changes in adult and noncredit education.

•Significant reduction in “recreational” courses or “lifelong learning.”

•Limits on community college repeatability.

•Priority registration (forthcoming).

Page 14: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

CCC Enrollment

Page 15: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

K-12 Graduates Change

Page 16: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Proposition 30“Yes” votes by age:

•18-29: 69%

•25-29: 61%

•30-39: 53%

•40-49: 47%

•50-64: 48%

•65+: 48%

Yes: 55.3%, No: 44.7%

Page 17: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Budget Outlook

Page 18: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Proposition 983.4%-5.3% increase per year

Page 19: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Looking Ahead• State’s outlook is moderately strong.

• K-12 graduates 4% lower in 2020-21 than in 2009-10.

• Students will choose employment over education.

• Fixed and accrued costs will escalate as % of district budgets.

• PERS, STRS, Retiree Health, “deferred” maintenance

• Low demand will give “catch up” time.

• Opportunities, and challenges ahead with divergent district needs.

Page 20: Presentation available at scottlay.com Looking Ahead Joint Special Populations Advisory Committee December 5, 2012.

Looking Ahead for CTE

•Modest Prop. 98 funding increases will strain budgets and pressure “low cost” programs.

•High demand in high cost programs --how to fund?

•Increased federal accountability likely with Perkins reauthorization.