public private partnership
Schwarzenegger’s Broken Promises on Higher Education and a New Study on the Effects of Cuts
[courtesy of California Progress Report]
By Robert Cruickshank
California higher education has not been having a good decade. When Arnold first took office a series of major cuts were made to the UC, CSU, and community college budgets. In 2004 a compact was agreed to between the UC and CSU leaders and Arnold, guaranteeing a stable, if low, level of funding. That agreement has been heavily criticized for having accepted a lower standard of state support - and that criticism looks to be merited, as Arnold now proposes to violate that agreement with his 10% cut of higher ed funding.
As a new study by the Campaign for College Opportunity shows, the proposed cuts would have the effect of severely curtailing enrollment by as much as 27,000 over the next two years, which is the size of an average UC or CSU undergraduate campus enrollment. And a study by the UC Academic Senate found that "to maintain educational quality" student fees would have to rise from $7,500 to $10,500 - a staggering increase from an already high level:
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Arnold's Attack on Higher Education
by Robert in Monterey [courtesy of Calitics - Front Page]
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High Speed Rail and Public Private Partnerships in California: A Shotgun Wedding?
[courtesy of California Progress Report]
By Robert Cruickshank
This has been published on my new California High Speed Rail blog.
As those of you who have been reading me for the last year know, I love high speed rail. And you'd also know that I am deeply skeptical - to put it mildly - of public private partnerships (P3). So what am I to do when they are joined together in a shotgun wedding? From a press release put out by the California High Speed Rail Authority:
"California High-Speed Rail Authority Executive Director Mehdi Morshed, joined Governor Schwarzenegger Tuesday in participating in a roundtable discussion at the State Capitol regarding the importance of investing in California's infrastructure and maintaining the state's economic growth through public private partnerships.
"Mr. Morshed noted the California proposed system of high-speed trains offers a unique opportunity to develop a new model for "P3" or public private partnership financing....
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HSR and P3: A Shotgun Wedding?
by Robert in Monterey [courtesy of Calitics - Front Page]
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