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I’ve been taking a class at CSM one day a week for the last six or seven semesters. It’s a beautiful campus with a lot of open space, top notch facilities and not a lot of students. I’m paying a modest tuition for a two-hour, non-degree class and happy to do so. For some degree-seeking students, tuition is “free”. Of course, it’s not free but rather taxpayer subsidized. The freebie has been given to about 5,000 students over the last three years and yet the campus often feels empty on a Tuesday afternoon except for the athletic facility. Now our state senator, Josh Becker, wants to double down on “free” per the DJ:

Following the success of the San Mateo County Community College District’s Free College pilot, a bill making the initiative a permanent program will be introduced to the California Legislature in the new year.

The district covers the costs that are waived for qualified students, which Moreno described as a necessary investment. For the 2025-26 school year, the Board of Trustees approved allocating $12.5 million for the Free College expenses.

The freebies for select students doesn’t give me a lot of heartburn but calling it “free” does. The $12.5M per year comes from somewhere and everyone–students, administrators and taxpayers–should remember that. The next move up on the hill in San Mateo is a big change from a community college to one with on-campus housing. Per the DJ 

Districtwide student housing at College of San Mateo is inching closer to becoming a reality after the community college district’s Board of Trustees approved a $61.85 million contract with developers who intend to break ground in the spring. 

The proposed housing facility will provide 316 beds to first-generation, low-income and housing-insecure students attending any of the three colleges within the San Mateo County Community College District.

As I said, there is a lot of land up there and that makes it possible to do this sort of project at about $200K per bed. The land is also not “free” – it has opportunity costs as well as infrastructure costs to accommodate the intensified usage. Let’s hope this major project is run on the up and up and doesn’t result in another big trial of anyone involved like what is going on down in RWC right now. It would also be nice if the county’s cities got a bit of a RHNA credit for the new housing. Everyone but the YIMBYs knows the RHNA numbers are way off and should be redone. Here’s one chance to do so.

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10 responses to “CSM: “Free college” and new housing”

  1. perfectly1a88429a33

    Democrat politicians love spending taxpayers money. Have you ever heard of a democrat politician opposing a tax increase? I didn’t think so.

  2. Mom

    Sixty million here, sixty million there. Pretty soon you are talking about real money.

  3. Peter Garrison

    The headline in the Daily Journal this morning is “Is college worth the cost?”

    You get what a pay for…

  4. HMB

    Why does a community college need to provide housing for students that are already living in the community??? These are commuter schools — why should they provide housing?

  5. Sequoia Susie

    Those are four smart comments. Sad little low IQ politicians like Josh Becker get rewarded by low IQ voters for doing sad little things. The state is headed down the crapper but at least we have free tuition and soon mostly free room and board at a community college as HMB said. Even if it is free it’s not worth the cost in time if you are studying something useless. I hope that most of the Bulldogs are studying something useful. The nursing program is good and if low IQ Josh wanted to do something good he would triple the enrollment. Forget building dorms and build a student learning center that prepares nurses for the real world situations at the overworked local hospitals.

  6. Fugit All

    Can report that it is well worth the cost in time to study something “useless” if it’s something interesting to you. I’ve taken classes up the hill thirty years ago and again for the past few semesters; next spring I’ll be taking a few online. The “useless” subjects brought much more joy in learning than the useful ones, whatever that means. What is learning if not a path of discovery? How can you decide a subject is useless until you learn about it? We’re lucky to have a local community college system with so much to offer that does not present barriers to entry and I can recommend to everyone the benefit of joining a class or two just for fun… maybe even especially for fun!

    Btw the pools up at CSM are a blast to swim in and the views can’t be beat.

  7. Sequoia Susie

    Well if the county residents are going to pay for it because it’s “free” then the courses should lead to something that helps the people who paid for it. The Fire Academy and the nursing program are perfect examples. The STEM courses add to the economy. Teaching credential coursework!

    If you want to take discretionary adult learning courses as an adult and pay for them fine. That’s not what this free stuff is for.

  8. Joe

    From the DJ:

    Making free college a permanent program in the San Mateo County Community College District took another big step in the current legislative cycle through Senate Bill 968 that seeks to break cost barriers to education for county residents.

    The bill submitted to the state legislature Wednesday is authored by state Sen. Josh Becker, D-Menlo Park, in partnership with assemblymembers Marc Berman, D-Palo Alto, and Diane Papan, D-San Mateo. It’s the first official step in getting the state’s approval to make permanent the successful pilot program that has increased enrollment and opportunity for students.
    ——————————-
    There is that little problem of a $31 billion dollar deficit and little better news over the next few fiscal years, but so what, right?

  9. Cassandra

    I bet in a decade or two the 4 year college experiment will end. Kids will be sent to one or two-year apprentice programs for specific skill acquisition. Then they will go to the job for which they were trained.

    Soft sciences like the humanities will be mentioned in the apprentice program but not emphasized. Studies such as “Gender” etc, will disappear.

  10. Joe

    Ground has broken on the $61.85 M housing project on the CSM campus. One of two large parking lots has been fenced off and the backhoes are hard at work. If a campus has 316 beds of housing is it still a “community college”?

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