AB 1000, as amended, Weber. California State University: student success fees.
Existing law establishes the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, as one of the segments of public postsecondary education in this state. Existing law authorizes the trustees by rule to require all persons to pay fees, rents, deposits, and charges for services, facilities, or materials provided by the trustees to those persons. Existing law prohibits specified California State University campus-based mandatory fees from being reallocated without an affirmative vote of the majority of the members of either the student body or a specified campus fee advisory committee voting on the fee reallocation, unless the vote that established the fee authorizes an alternative or automatic reallocation mechanism for that fee.
Existing law prohibits a campus or the Chancellor of the California State University from approving a student success fee, as defined, before January 1, 2016. Existing law requires the chancellor to conduct a review of the trustees’ fee policy related to student success fees, submit recommended changes to the fee policy to the trustees, consider specified information in conducting that review and in preparing his or her recommended changes to the policy, and to submit a report regarding those proposed changes to the Department of Finance and the appropriate fiscal and policy committees of the Legislature, on or before February 1, 2015.
This bill would revise and recast the requirements related to student success fees. The bill would prohibit a campus of the California State University, or the Chancellor of the California State University, from imposing a student success fee, as defined, unless certain requirements are met. The bill would establish procedures for campus elections for the adoption or rescission of student success fees. The bill would require the chancellor to report a summary of the fees adopted or rescinded in the prior academic year, and the uses of proposed and currently implemented fees, annually to the Department of Finance and the Legislature.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 89712 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 89712 is added to the Education Code, to read:
(a) (1) A campus of the California State University,
4or the Chancellor of the California State University, or both, shall
5not approve a new student success fee or an increase to an existing
6student success fee, as defined in subdivision (g), before all of the
7following requirements are satisfied:
8(A) The campus undertakes a rigorous consultation process that
9informs and educates students on the uses, impact, and cost of any
10proposed student success fee or student success fee increase.
11(B) The campus informs its students of all of the following
12circumstances, which shall apply to these fees:
P3 1(i) That, except as provided in clauses (ii) and (iii), a student
2success fee may be rescinded by a majority vote of the students,
3as specified in subdivision (c).
4(ii) That a student success fee may not be rescinded earlier than
5six years following the vote to implement the fee.
6(iii) If any portion of the student success fee is committed to
7support a long-term obligation, that portion of the fee may not be
8rescinded until the obligation has been satisfied.
9(C) The campus shall hold a binding student election on the
10implementation of any proposed student success fees, or any
11increase to an existing student success fee, and a majority of the
12student
body voting on the fee must vote affirmatively.
13(2) Implementation of a fee supported by a majority of the
14campus student body voting on the fee is contingent uponbegin insert theend insert final
15approval of the Chancellor of the California State University.
16(3) A student success fee proposal may not be brought before
17the student body more frequently than once per academic year.
18(b) A student success fee in place on January 1, 2016, may be
19rescinded by a binding student vote under the procedures
20authorized in subdivision (c) only after at least six years have
21elapsed following the implementation of the fee.
22(c) (1) Student success fees may be rescinded with a binding
23student vote wherein a simple majority of those students voting
24vote to rescind the fee. The student vote shall comply with all of
25the following:
26(A) A campus decision to vote is formally approved by the
27recognized student government.
28(B) Rescission vote proposals shall not be brought before the
29student body more frequently than once per academic year.
30(C) In the process of reconsidering a student success fee, and
31before the student vote occurs, the students shall be informed, if
32a portion of the fee is supporting a long-term obligation, the dollar
33amount of that portion, and the date on which the long-term
34obligation would be
satisfied.
35(2) No new contractual or other obligation that would be
36supported by the rescinded student success fee may be entered into
37following a vote to rescind the fee.
38(d) The Chancellor of the California State University shall
39ensure that all of the following occur on each campus:
P4 1(1) There is majority student representation in campus student
2success fee allocation oversight groups.
3(2) There is an annual report from each campus to the chancellor
4on student success fees.
5(3) There is uniform, transparent, online accountability in the
6decisionmaking process for, and a detailed
accounting of, the
7allocation of student success fees.
8(e) The Chancellor of the California State University shall
9establish appropriate reporting procedures to ensure that a campus
10is in compliance with the requirements of this section.
11(f) The chancellor shall report, by December 1 of each year, to
12the Department of Finance, and the Legislature pursuant to Section
139795 of the Government Code, a summary of the fees adopted or
14rescinded in the prior academic year, and the uses of proposed and
15currently implemented fees.
16(g) For purposes of this section, a “student success fee” is a type
17of category II campus-based mandatory fee that is required to be
18paid by a student before that student may enroll or attend a campus
19of
the California State University, as determined by that campus
20or the Chancellor of the California State University.
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