BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                  AB 1761
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          Date of Hearing:   April 14, 2010

                        ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS
                                Felipe Fuentes, Chair

                  AB 1761 (Fong) - As Introduced:  February 8, 2010 

          Policy Committee:                              Higher  
          EducationVote:8-0

          Urgency:     No                   State Mandated Local Program:  
          No     Reimbursable:               

           SUMMARY  

          This bill phases in elimination of the restriction in the Cal  
          Grant B program that, in the first year of enrollment, denies  
          tuition benefits and instead provides only a stipend for "access  
          costs"-i.e. costs for books, supplies, living expenses, and  
          transportation-to 98% of Cal Grant B recipients. 
          Specifically, this bill:

          1)Increases from 2% to 25% the number of first-year Cal-Grant B  
            recipients eligible for tuition and fee payments in the  
            2011-12 academic year.

          2)Increases the above percentage to:
             a)   50% in 2012-13.
             b)   75% in 2013-14.
             c)   100% in 2014-15.

           FISCAL EFFECT  

          Additional GF costs of about $50 million in 2011-12, when an  
          additional 7,700 Cal Grant B recipients would receive tuition  
          benefits, increasing to $133 million in 2014-15, when an  
          additional 21,300 recipients would receive tuition benefits.  
          These estimates are based on the estimated number of awards to  
          be paid in 2010-11 and do not account for any tuition or fee  
          increases after 2010-11.

           COMMENTS  

           1)Background  . In both the entitlement and competitive Cal Grant  
            programs, a very low-income student qualifies for a Cal Grant  








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            B, while middle-income students qualify for a Cal Grant A. In  
            recognition that Cal Grant B serves the lowest income  
            students, the annual award pays for tuition and fees and a  
            small stipend (currently $1,551) toward books, supplies, food  
            and rent. (Cal Grant A pays for tuition and fees only.) When  
            the Cal Grant B program was authorized (in the early 1960s as  
            the "College Opportunity Grant Program") it was assumed that  
            the lowest income students would not go to a four-year college  
            or university, but rather would choose to go to a community  
            college first. Therefore, the program allowed for first-year  
            tuition and fee payments for only the top 2% of the Cal Grant  
            B recipients. 

            This assumption is no longer presumed to be valid, but the Cal  
            Grant B program still does not pay tuition and fees in the  
            first year for 98% of the recipients. Thus the majority of  
            those Cal Grant B students who initially enroll in a four-year  
            institution must take on additional debt to cover their  
            first-year tuition unless they are fortunate enough to receive  
            other, offsetting financial aid, such as from the institution  
            itself.

           2)Inequity of Current Policy  . Some lower income (Cal Grant B)  
            students receive a smaller lifetime award than higher income  
            (Cal Grant A) students. A Cal Grant B award recipient  
            enrolling at a private college may receive $3,504 less over  
            the lifetime of the grant than the Cal Grant A recipient at  
            the same school. This is because the first-year tuition  
            benefit (currently a maximum of $9,708) is more than four  
            years of the access grant (currently $1,551) received under  
            Cal Grant B. In 2007-08, for the first time students attending  
            the University of California (UC) faced the same situation. As  
            a result, UC is beginning to shift its students from Cal Grant  
            B to Cal Grant A awards, when possible, to provide students  
            with the highest four-year award.

           3)Prior Legislation  . AB 2365 (De La Torre) of 2008 and AB 302  
            (De La Torre) of 2007, which were similar to this measure,  
            were held on this committee's Suspense File. AB 2813 (De La  
            Torre)/Chapter 822 of 2006, included similar provisions, which  
            were removed by this committee.

           4)Concern . The significant cost of implementing the change  
            proposed by this bill, however meritorious, would be a  
            challenge given the state's ongoing structural budget deficit.








                                                                  AB 1761
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           Analysis Prepared by  :    Chuck Nicol / APPR. / (916) 319-2081