News

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Trick or Treat? Hotel/Conference Center Plan Coming Tomorrow

Word has it that the revised proposal for the hotel/conference center will not replace the Faculty Center. The plan – apparently to be announced tomorrow – is reported to put it where Parking Structure 6 is now located, near the West Center. See map to the left. So we will await the details. How scary could it be? By the day after tomorrow, you will know:

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Hole in the Middle of UC Admissions?

Middle income student attendance declines at UC Samantha Schaefer, 2011-10-30 Orange County Register Over the past 10 years, the proportion of middle-income students attending the University of California has declined at nearly twice the rate of California middle-income households, while the share of lower- and upper-income UC students has risen. Some analysts suggest the trend stems from repeated hikes in UC tuition costs, coupled with limited access to many kinds of aid for middle-income students, who are increasingly incurring larger and larger loan debt. “We’ve got some significant problems here,” said William Tierney, USC Rossier School of Education professor, Wilbur-Kieffer…

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Crane Likely to Pick Up on Pension Issue at Next Regents Meeting

Regent David Crane – a last-minute appointee to the Regents by Gov. Schwarzenegger – has been a public pension hawk and has made remarks about collective bargaining that ensured he would not be confirmed. Assuming he attends the November Regents meeting (Crane’s last given the non-confirmation), he is likely to say something about the pension issue. The Regents’ agenda for November is not yet posted. But even if the pension item is not a formal agenda topic, Crane can bring it up. That is not a Bad Thing. The Regents should be informed about the impact of the governor’s pension…

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Was that Jerry or Casey at the Bat (on pensions)?

Now that it is clear the governor wants UC to be part of his public sector pension proposal, you might be curious about what the Legislative Analyst thinks: LAO calls pension plan excellent start Duane W. Gang, Riverside Press-Enterprise 10/27/11 California’s nonpartisan legislative analyst praised Gov. Jerry Brown’s pension plan Thursday and said it deserves consideration by the Legislature. “I thought it knocked the ball out of the park,” Mac Taylor, who heads the Legislative Analyst’s Office, said during a lecture series at his alma mater, UC Riverside. “I think it is an excellent start.” … Full article at http://www.pe.com/local-news/politics/duane-gang-headlines/20111027-inland-lao-calls-pension-plan-excellent-start.ece…

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Things are Tough in Sacramento So We Don’t Yet Have Final Word on UC Coverage

We’re still waiting for the definitive answer as of Friday afternoon as to whether UC is covered by the governor’s pension proposal. But apparently, folks at the Dept. of Finance and Legislature are busy with other matters: California Finance Director Ana Matosantos arrested on DUI charge http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2011/10/california-finance-director-ana-matosantos-arrested-on-suspicion-of-dui.html (The budget must be worse than anyone imagined.) Folks in the legislature have also been busy: Assemblywoman Mary Hayashi arrested for shoplifting http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2011/10/report-assemblywoman-hayashi-arrested-for-shoplifting.html When things settle down up north and we get final info, we’ll post it. UPDATE: UC’s coverage by the governor’s pension plan has now been confirmed. More info will be…

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The Morning After (the Guv’s Pension Plan): What Do We Know?

It’s the morning after the governor’s press conference announcing his pension proposals – and we still do not have definite word as to whether UC is covered. The LA Times version says all state and local employees are covered. Excerpt: Who would be affected? All state and local public employees. Current workers would be expected to pay at least half of their retirement costs, but the higher retirement age and new savings plan would apply only to employees hired later. See http://www.latimes.com/news/local/politics/la-me-pension-qa-20111028,0,4930171.story And there is a lot of fuzziness in the announced plan. For example, how do you “cap” a…

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The Guv on Pensions: What did he say?

Governor Brown has now held his press conference on public pensions. His proposals clearly covered CalPERS and CalSTRS. Coverage of UC was not mentioned. But the governor did make an off-hand reference to UC’s long pension holiday, i.e., the two-decade period of zero contributions. The governor released a 12-point plan but one element, a kind of total cap on pension amounts, was not mentioned on the list of the twelve. [A cap is mentioned but not linked to defined contributions.] Yet, in response to a reporter’s question, he said a cap was intended but that it was complicated because of…

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Out of the box on higher ed: Uh Oh

From the Sacramento Bee today (excerpt): Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom railed against tuition increases and said Wednesday that the state’s master plan for higher education is outdated, promising “a different narrative” for higher education by the end of the year. It was unclear what the plan might contain or how Newsom, a Democrat, might propose to fund it. “We’re going to come up with some out- of-the-box recommendations, is our hope and expectation,” he told The Bee’s Capitol Bureau. Fifty years after the production of the California Master Plan for Higher Education, Newsom said he and officials are preparing to…