Cal State University announces that it's forced to block new students

| | Comments (2) |

From the CSU headquarters in Long Beach:

(Nov. 20, 2008 ) -- In response to the state's worsening fiscal crisis, and in anticipation of additional proposed budget cuts, for the first time in its history, the California State University has declared a systemwide impaction that will result in fewer students admitted for next fall. The CSU is already serving 10,000 students for whom the state provides no funding, and all indications are that 2009-10 will be the second consecutive year that the CSU receives no funding for enrollment growth. Potentially, CSU may curtail enrollment by up to 10,000 students throughout the system.

"Because the state is unable to provide the resources needed to fully fund demand, we are forced to make this difficult decision," said CSU Chancellor Charles B. Reed. "We cannot admit students if we are unable to provide adequate classes or instruction, support services or classroom facilities. We are taking this step to ensure the academic quality of the institution."

California's 2008-09 budget provided $2.97 billion of state General Funds to the CSU. That is essentially the same amount the system received the previous year, and $215 million less than what is needed to meet enrollment growth and fund other operational expenses. In addition, the CSU faces a mid-year cut of $66.3 million, and a recent one-time $31.3 million reduction.

For several years, CSU has continued to admit more students than the state has funded in order to provide access to all eligible students, and to maintain the pipeline of graduates into the state's workforce. Currently, the CSU has approximately 450,000 students. Each year, nearly 90,000 CSU students graduate to begin working in California's key industries including nursing, engineering, agriculture, business, education, information technology and others.

In response, CSU campuses have increased class sizes when possible, and opened more course sections with temporary faculty appointments. But, decreasing revenues are causing a strain on resources, and this will no longer be possible, according to Reed.

"We cannot continue to admit students if we do not receive adequate funding from the state to support such enrollment," said Reed. "The quality of all students' education will be degraded by the chronic combination of underfunding and overenrollment."

CSU campuses will still be required to admit all local CSU-eligible first-time freshmen and local upper division transfer students as is the usual established admissions policy. This will ensure that students who are not able to relocate, have jobs or family obligations will still be admitted to their local campus, provided they meet eligibility requirements. Many of these students are underserved, first-generation college students. In addition, campuses that need to increase enrollment to meet their funded student target limits may admit students from restricted categories with approval from the chancellor.

Under impaction, campuses will be allowed to use supplemental admissions criteria such as grade point average or wait list students in order to control enrollment. Priority will be given to continuing undergraduate students already enrolled, followed by California community college transfer students meeting transfer requirements, and California residents entering at freshman or sophomore levels. Non-resident students will have the lowest priority for admissions.

Record Number of Applications/Deadlines Pushed Up
The curtailment of enrollment comes at a time when demand to attend the CSU is rapidly rising. Applications for fall 2009 are up by almost 20 percent from this time last year, with even greater demand by community college transfer students (36 percent). A number of CSU campuses that are already impacted will stop accepting applications for freshmen admission on Nov. 30 for fall 2009 including Fullerton, Long Beach, Pomona, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Sonoma, Channel Islands, Northridge and San José State. San Francisco State will close Dec. 10. Campuses at Chico and San Marcos will review freshmen applications after Nov. 30 on a "space available" basis.

In addition, campuses that were overenrolled for the 2008-09 year and need to curtail enrollment to meet the funded number of students must also stop accepting applications after Nov. 30 All campuses will close admissions for first-time freshmen by March 1, 2009, and some may close before that date if no enrollment space is available.

"We know that students turn to higher education when the economy is in a downturn, but the CSU is experiencing unprecedented admissions demand while having to reduce our enrollment," said Allison Jones, assistant vice chancellor for student academic affairs. "We are telling students to make sure they know the deadlines for applications, apply to their local campus, and have a back up plan in terms of campus selection."

Prospective students should visit the website www.csumentor.edu to complete the online application and obtain information about CSU campuses, deadlines and financial aid. In addition, CSU has posted a video on YouTube reminding students of the Nov. 30 deadline. View it here.

2 Comments

Reader Bob said:

Maybe the CSU System should take a hard look at who is attending and/or applying for admission into this statewide education system. Perhaps our economy has now reached the saturation point and will no longer be able to provide educations to those individuals who are in California under questionable terms (illegal immigrants). If they continue to do so, they have reached the point that limits admission to the students who are legal residents / students.

These individuals have and are impacting every available social service in this state at a time when in doing so, due to the shear numbers, are now preventing legal residents from attending. The CSU system just may be the first of many to declare it can no longer open it doors as wide as previously done.

This is truly a hot-button issue where most legal residents from the Governor down would rather stick their head in the sand and hope it would just go away than to confront it head-on. Until the Southern Boarder of the United States is adequately and effectively controlled the CSU systems, the welfare systems, the healthcare systems, the education systems (K-12), to name a few, are and will continue to be impacted to the point where their services become limited or restricted from servicing the very individuals they were meant to service, the citizens of the USA.

If not checked in a most timely fashion, this could be just another indicator that the American way of life as we know it, is now reverting to the exact way of life these individuals left behind in their homelands. So many are funneling untold funds to their families back home instead of spending or using those monies here to bolster our economy as it should and needs to be.

reality said:

well for one to blame or even use illegal immigrants as a scapegoat is beyond pathetic. ironically getting educated on this supposed issue would put any tom, bob, dick or harry to shame.


it's just to bad that some ignorant eggs have so much to say about things they clearly know nothing about.

Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.

About SB Now Blog

Andrew Edwards. E-mail Andrew here.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Andrew Edwards published on November 20, 2008 1:15 PM.

Sacramento stiffs cities was the previous entry in this blog.

SB malls deal with vacancies is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Breaking News

Other blogs

Advertisement

Powered by Movable Type 4.25