Cutting class: Community colleges see effects of state budget cuts

Cuts to Seattle-area community colleges in the face of a contracted state budget may deal a major blow to the state's still-suffering economy.

North Seattle Community College

Lawrence W. Cheek

North Seattle Community College

In her ten years of teaching students in Seattle Central Community College’s award-winning film and video communications program, Sandra Cioffi has reason to be proud of her protégés.

Graduates of her two-year Associate of Applied Science degree program have made their mark as successful photojournalists, radio producers, independent video filmmakers, lighting technicians, set designers, technical directors, and editors. The program itself provides training for careers in television, video, film, and multimedia industries and is unique in its focus on current technology and experts from the media industry.

Cioffi is also justly proud of the national recognition the program has garnered since it was established 25 years ago. In October 1992, the Film and Video Communications Program was selected for the Region 10 Secretary’s Award by the U.S. Department of Education, which annually recognizes outstanding professional technical programs noted for dynamic teaching methodologies.

“Our film and video program is considered the Harvard of two-year training programs in Washington State,” Cioffi said. “Similar programs exist elsewhere, such as the Art Institute of Seattle, Bellevue College, and Cornish College of the Arts, but they’re much more expensive.”

Beyond mastering the technical skills of their craft, Cioffi’s students develop skills in written and oral communication, critical thinking and analysis, and human relations. Like many of Seattle Central Community College’s two-year degree programs, Film and Video Communications has appealed to high school graduates who ordinarily wouldn’t go on to a four-year college.

What’s equally impressive is that many of Cioffi students have gone on to pursue studies at four-year institutions such as New York University, Evergreen State College, and Central and Western Washington State Universities.

For Gabriel Culkin, 22, a second-year student, the film and video program has given him the confidence to succeed in the film industry. “As a student, I’ve had the opportunity to work on two Hollywood feature films and felt prepared.” Culkin already has lined up a new job as a key set production assistant for a new movie to be filmed in Seattle.

The popular film and video program is one of Seattle Central Community College’s signature programs, and enrollment has been burgeoning in the last decade. “In the 10 years I’ve taught at the program, we have not had one empty seat,” Cioffi said. “We’ve actually had to turn students away.”

The program has been especially successful at recruiting students of color, according to Karen Strickland, a longtime Seattle Central Community College faculty member who heads the Seattle chapter of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT). “The program has a long waiting list of 55 students who are hoping to fill 32 seats in the fall.”

Now, with Washington’s worsening economic crisis, the Legislature’s 2011-2013 biennial budget has thrown a monkey wrench into their hopes to earn the coveted degree. Last May, lawmakers slashed $85 million from the state’s community and technical colleges’ budgets. As a result, Seattle Central Community College has to eliminate three of its degree programs — including film and video production. The other two slated for closure include the college’s interpreter training program, which prepares interpreters to work with the hearing-impaired, and publishing arts.

Cioffi is devastated by the budget cuts, announced June 6 of this year. “Current students enrolled in the program will be permitted to finish their degrees provided they do so by June 2012, but what will happen to the students who are just beginning the program this fall?”

Other programs are being scaled back too. Though Seattle Central’s apparel design program will still be partially state-funded, the college expects to seek private funds to compensate for its higher cost. Meanwhile, Strickland says, “The college’s opticianry program is being turned into a self-supported program, meaning it will no longer be state-funded.” The parent education program will also be forced to reduce the number of its state-funded, tuition-based sections. Finally, the college will close the Information Center and reduce the number of sections in Basic Skills.

Edmonds Community College is dealing with the cuts a little differently. Summer enrollment is now 5,905 students. As a result of the economic downturn, many students are retraining in such high-demand fields as aerospace, advanced materials science, computer technology, and nursing, which are offered at Edmonds. Forty-one percent of its graduates transfer to four-year colleges and university.

The school does not plan to eliminate any programs, however it will be cutting the budget for instructional programs by about $200,000, said President Jean Hernandez. “There will be 40 to 45 fewer class sections than last year, and the part-time faculty will be impacted directly by this reduction.”

The rest of Seattle Community College District’s 837 part-time instructors will also feel the pinch of cuts. “In Seattle, most part-timers are only allowed to teach 66 percent of a full-time load because if they teach more than that, they have to be paid from the full-time schedule, which is markedly more,” Strickland explained.

“With fewer course offerings, many part-timers will lose their classes. Tenured faculty and priority hires will not be [as] affected by the reductions, however. Priority hires can be, and have been, affected, as will tenured faculty if their programs are eliminated.  But most of the job loss will occur among part-time faculty.”

Overall, the Legislature’s budget cuts will result in a five percent reduction in course offerings for all campuses in the Seattle Community College District, said Strickland. South Seattle Community College will eliminate its commercial truck driving degree program, while North Seattle Community College’s real estate program will be pared back. A few certificates within the program have already been temporarily suspended because of the slow real estate job market.

Across Washington State, the budget cuts are also placing many other community and technical college programs in jeopardy. The Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges projects that as many as 25,000 students [or 10,000 full-time equivalent students, or FTES] could be turned away – a statewide enrollment drop from 359,000 to 334,000 students.

For the most part, colleges already have made the cuts, which include scaling back programs, or in some cases, eliminating entire programs. “The cuts vary by college,” said Charlie Earl, executive director of the state board. “Colleges make unique decisions based on their community, students, and local employers’ needs, as well as their individual budget constraints.”

Community college programs won't be the only victims of the state's slashed budget. The $85 million cuts also mean that financial assistance for community college students will suffer, Edmonds' Hernandez said . “Thirty-four percent of the college’s students are students of color. The college plans to increase its visibility with low-income and students of color in the future.”

“To that end, the college has now begun partnerships with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People [NAACP] and YMCA,” she said. “Edmonds Community College also serves a large number of homeless students and veterans who may be limited in the number of classes they can take because of the tuition increases.”

“The federal government continues to discuss ways to reduce Pell grants,” she said. “Reducing the maximum grants from $5,500 to $4,704, coupled with increasing tuition, and unknown state student aid budgets and awards, would either adversely affect our students’ ability to attend college [especially those in the low-to-mid family income levels], or if a student is able to attend, would substantially increase the student loan indebtedness.”


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Comments:

Posted Fri, Aug 19, 4:49 p.m. Inappropriate

Thank for mentioning that the part-time/adjunct faculty will suffer the employment brunt of this, even though many of them have been working longer than their tenured colleagues.
Perhaps you should also mention that the unions' efforts have been mostly aimed at preserving tenured positions when they are threatened. The sad fact is that the unions in Washington have neglected to provide any true job security for the part-time/adjuncts, who are the majority of faculty. There are a few colleges that have quarterly seniority lists for preference hiring for some adjuncts, but even they are easily vulnerable to layoff no matter how long they've worked.

dcc701

Posted Fri, Aug 19, 5:46 p.m. Inappropriate

No one wins when education is cut. As pointed out by the previous poster, the state of Washington has been calling 75% of the higher education teachers "part-time," when these dedicated instructors provide much of the backbone of the state's higher education system.
All students have a right to access to education. The State of Washington needs to be a leader, not a quitter. We need to provide educationa for all.
There's money available. The legislators need to ensure that the funds are available for educating everyone.

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