SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) In addressing California’s fiscal crisis, state budget solutions over the last several fiscal years have included deep cuts and payment deferrals that have resulted in the loss of billions of dollars in funding for all segments of postsecondary education.
(b) In the 2011–12 fiscal year, the state contributed $16.4 billion to postsecondary education. However, the share of expenditures borne by California State University students in the form of fees has nearly doubled, from 18 percent in 2007–08, to 30 percent in 2011–12. A public postsecondary education has become unaffordable for the middle class. Most students
are leaving school thousands of dollars in debt, and they end up sending monthly payments to out-of-state banks rather than contributing to the local economy.
(c) With less access to postsecondary education due to courses being cut, each year students are taking longer and longer to graduate. It now takes the average student seven years to graduate from a California Community College campus, six and one-half years to graduate from a California State University campus, and four and one-half years to graduate from a University of California campus.
(d) Educational attainment levels predict the overall economic performance of states and nations. California was always among the top states in degree-completion rates, but it now ranks among the bottom 10 states.
(e) By 2018, 63 percent of all jobs in the United States will
require some form of postsecondary education or training, according to estimates by the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. The United States is on track to deliver only a fraction of this education. Currently, only 38 percent of America’s young adults have a college degree, compared to 58 percent in South Korea.
(f) California’s postsecondary education system has helped build and sustain an entrepreneurial spirit that has shaped new sectors of the state’s economy. During tough times like these, we need novel approaches to steer the state back on track.
(g) Estimates show that the College Access Tax Credit Fund will be fully subscribed for each of the three years of the program, allowing the California Student Aid Commission to fund larger access grants to California’s neediest students.
(h) All Californians deserve access to an affordable postsecondary education.