Coast cuts hours back for summer
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Marisa O’Neil
Schools and offices in the Coast Community College District will shut
down on Fridays this summer in an effort to cut utility costs.
Orange Coast College saved nearly $130,000 last summer by closing
on Fridays and not offering classes during peak hours for utilities
consumption. That savings allowed OCC to restore, for this spring
semester, some of the 500 classes that were cut from the fall
schedule.
“We’ve gone through two years’ worth of budget cuts and had no
funds restored,” district spokeswoman Erin Cohn said. “We’re still in
a fiscal constraint situation and we’re looking for every opportunity
to save money and put back as many classes as we’ve had to cut.”
The district’s schools and offices will switch to a four 10-hour
day per work week starting on June 1, and will return to its regular
schedule Aug. 20. Some programs, like criminal justice and
cosmetology, will still have Friday classes because of instructional
hour requirements.
OCC will operate the same as last summer, spokesman Jim Carnett
said. Classes will be offered Mondays through Thursdays in the
mornings and evenings.
No classes will meet between 12:30 and 6 p.m., when utility costs
are highest, on any day, he said. Mornings and evenings tend to be
the most popular time for students, particularly those who work and
those who like to enjoy the summer sun.
“If they do have the chance, students like to take a morning class
and go to the beach in the afternoon,” Carnett said.
Golden West College in Huntington Beach will also have only
limited classes available on Fridays, spokeswoman Marie McHerrin
said. The campus will offer classes throughout the day the rest of
the week, unlike OCC.
Over the past couple years, OCC has dropped about 1,500 classes
due to budget constraints. The state chancellor’s office placed Coast
Community College District on a financial watch list earlier this
year because its budget reserves slipped below the recommended 5%.
The district now has its reserves back up to 5%, Cohn said, which
should take it off the list when the next one comes out. But it will
still have more problems to face in the fall.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has asked state colleges to reduce
freshman enrollment by 10% and is expecting community colleges to
pick up the slack. Through a proposed dual admissions program,
qualified students will be guaranteed admission to University of
California campuses if they complete their general studies course
work at community colleges.
Without more money from the state, that plan could place
additional strain on campuses that are already offering fewer classes
to more students.
“Our existing students can’t [graduate] in time,” Cohn said.
“We’re happy to serve as many students as we can, but we still need
funding to do that.”
Coast Community College District’s impending sale of KOCE-TV to
the KOCE-TV Foundation is expected to ease its financial burden. It
may not, however, come in time to add more fall classes.
The Federal Communications Commission is expected to approve the
sale in July. At that time, the district would receive the remaining
$7.9 million down payment.
That money will go to a variety of uses, Cohn said, which may or
may not include creating more classes or beefing up employee
retirement account reserves, in line with state law.
“It will provide some relief to the budget in the short term,”
Cohn said.
OCC is in the process of putting together its fall schedule,
Carnett said. He expects that they will not have to cut the number of
course offerings from the spring.
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