Making Community College ‘Free’ Will Harm Serious Students: New at Reason

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s budget proposal that would provide California residents with a “free” second year of community college along with the provision of additional Cal Grant funding for parents who are struggling to put their children through college. This is well intentioned, but is one of the worst ideas in the governor’s new budget given the real-world effect it will have on California students.

The idea of a free college education goes back to California’s earliest days. As recently as 1960, the Master Plan for Higher Education reaffirmed “the long established principle that state colleges and the University of California shall be free to all residents of the state.” Shortly after that, the state university systems began charging tuition—and prices have soared as demand has outstripped supply and the legislature cut back on subsidies. As a matter of policy, it’s a good idea for people to pay for the things they use. If you want an education, you need to pay for it.

Even with a tuition-based system, the University of California and California State University systems are overburdened given that they offer a better deal than most private alternatives. There’s been progress, but it can still take six years to get a degree at a Cal State campus. Many students who cannot get the classes they need at “impacted” campuses.

Community college already is dirt cheap, at $46 a credit. Making it free will only assure that people who aren’t particularly serious about getting an education will take up space in sought-after classes, thus making it tougher for others to get into their preferred classes. This sounds harsh, but people unwilling to invest $1,100 a year in their own education perhaps ought to find something else to do. There is nothing like spending one’s own money to force people to take the coursework seriously, writes Steven Greenhut.

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