OCC should not fail students by class cuts
It appears a budget crisis at Orange Coast College is going to
hurt the people who least deserve it: the students.
OCC officials announced this month that, in order to trim away
about $500,000, spring classes are also going to get a trimming. It
is expected that the college will be able to offer about 20% fewer
sections, meaning more crowded classes at a school where small class
size is a key to its success and attraction.
The news would be distressing if the cause were a statewide budget
problem.
But, while that is part of the cause, it turns out the OCC
officials also are to blame.
“We’ve overextended our budget for offering classes,” said Bob
Dees, the college’s vice president of instruction. “We’re trying to
get back closer to our actual budget. We’ve been in such a high
growth mode that we’ve extended ourselves too far.”
Such mismanagement is troubling for two reasons. The first is that
students attending OCC -- a smart way to get an education, where one
can build a solid foundation without emptying a bank account -- are
going to suffer. They will be in classes that are bigger than they
ought to be.
Others will not get the classes they want.
It is also troubling because OCC is part of the Coast Community
College District, which has put on the November ballot a $370-million
bond designed to fund a host of facility improvements at the three
district campuses.
But if college officials are failing to manage the money they
have, it sends a poor signal to voters that they can be trusted with
millions more, however needed that money might be.
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