Viewpoints Issue No. 1 August 20, 2020

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August 20, 2020

News

NEWS BRIEFS RCC Welcome Week 2020 This year’s Welcome Week will be broadcast on Riverside City College’s YouTube channel from Aug. 17 to 22. The Admissions and Records Department will hold a presentation on education rights entitled “Protecting Your Lair” on Aug. 20. Engagement centers and academic deans will broadcast a welcome message Aug. 21. Campus police will broadcast a presentation on safety Aug. 22. The International Student Center and Altura Federal Credit Union will also broadcast presentations that day.

Important dates The fall 2020 semester begins Aug. 24. For most courses, the last day to add or drop with a refund is Sep. 4. For most courses, the last day to drop without a Withdrawal is Sep. 6 and the last day to drop with a Withdrawal is Nov. 17. Because some courses allow different dates for adding and dropping, students should check their class information in WebAdvisor.

CARES Act Distribution Applications for fall 2020 disbursement of remaining CARES Act funds will be open from Aug. 31 to Sep. 11. The Riverside Community College District expects to begin disbursing funds Sep. 24. To apply, students should log into MyPortal and select “CARES APPLICATION” in the Financial Aid menu. For more information, visit https://www.rccd.edu/ covid_funding_resources/ Pages/index.aspx.

To s t a y u p - t o date on upcoming campus events, visit the Viewpoints calendar listed at viewpointsonline.org. If you have events happening on campus that you want featured on the calender, send information about the event to viewpoints. news@gmail.com.

PHOTO COURTESY OF COOLCAESAR AT ENGLISH WIKIPEDIA

The entrance to the headquarters of the California Community Colleges at 1102 Q Street in downtown Sacramento. This building is also home to the Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement of the California Department of Justice. 24 June 2007.

State chancellor holds town hall California Community Colleges may see cuts for 2020-21 ERIK GALICIA EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

The head of the California Community College system called for students to actively participate in advocacy for their needs as they navigate the financial uncertainty of the fall 2020 semester. The system is looking at around $1.5 billion in deferrals for the 2020-21 academic year, meaning colleges may not receive that amount of funding they are owed until the following year. If congress approves a large enough stimulus bill by October, Community Colleges may receive around $800 million from the state. “We are asking everyone to call their member of Congress,” Oakley said during a virtual student town hall Aug. 18. “Push that the next federal stimulus happen soon and that it include funding based on headcount, not on full-time equivalent students.” The full-time equivalency measure can count several part-

time students as one full-time student, often leading to less funding per student for colleges that have large part-time student populations. Oakley warned that although deferrals may sound like spared budget cuts, state colleges will not be receiving a large percentage of the revenue they expected this upcoming academic year. Colleges may have to borrow money from the markets in order to continue to support their students and employees. “You can still expect that there will be some cuts,” Oakley said. “Exactly where those cuts will happen depends on the fiscal stability of the college district, but all of our colleges are experiencing a strain on their budgets.” Oakley claimed there is no sign at this point that the Community College system should expect the lack of resources seen in the years after the 2008 recession, but admitted students from small colleges or colleges experiencing financial difficulties should expect fewer sections offered.

The state chancellor encouraged students to use the California Virtual Campus course exchange, which his office has invested heavily in, to help students find online courses not offered at their colleges. The CVC allows students to search for courses using a variety of criteria and sorts available classes according to the distance from their home campuses. “This fall semester we are in a much better place than we were in the spring,” Oakley said. “There will be some initial growing pains the first few weeks of the semester. But (students) should expect the same services they’ve always come to expect from our faculty and our staff.” Several students from across the state raised concerns over faculty availability outside of scheduled class time and the possibility that attempts to curb cheating might drive instructors to implement unreasonable grading policies and expectations. Oakley urged students to call on their student presidents and trustees for representation during

Academic Senate and Board of Trustees meetings if necessary. “We will continue to look at Title 5 and relax or waive regulations (to) help students continue to make progress and not be penalized because they’ve lost work, they’ve had to reduce hours, they have family members who are sick,” Oakley said. The U.S. Department of Education recently appealed a Supreme Court decision that ruled the federal government could not withhold emergency pandemic aid from undocumented students, as the Trump administration tried to do at the end of the spring 2020 semester after backtracking on initial guidance that allowed colleges authority over how funds would be disbursed. Will Becerra, California attorney general, is responding to the appeal. “I’m confident we will continue to overcome the ridiculous arguments Washington (D.C.) makes,” Oakley said. The state chancellor urged students who may have trouble qualifying for financial aid to visit icanaffordcollege.com.


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