College students and faculty fight austerity

Latest

The “10th Annual Life is Living” festival in Oakland, CA started their event by recreating the Black Panther Breakfast program. Volunteers provided free breakfast to anyone who came, no questions asked.
PHOTO/MICHELLE SNIDER

 
OAKLAND, CA — The California state government holds $19 billion in reserve “rainy day” funds, yet in Oakland, our community colleges are being slammed with austerity-justified cuts that result in criminal disinvestment in public education.
It is already raining! This torrential downpour includes a crumbling infrastructure that has put us on “fire watch” requiring security guards to patrol the campus all day to prevent fires, frequently broken elevators, a student center and library years overdue for replacement, and bathrooms that are cleaned just once a day. Massive cuts in class offerings—300 fewer classes this spring—make it harder for students to get the required courses they need to graduate and also mean the potential layoff of over 100 part-time contingent faculty who are 70% of faculty in our district.
The cost of housing is so high in Oakland and the San Francisco Bay Area that many students, part-time faculty and newer full-time faculty, are struggling to make ends meet. In a survey of contingent faculty in our district, 51% pay more than a third of their income for rent, and an additional 1.2% are unhoused or homeless. Fully 16 % of contingent faculty report they are receiving welfare benefits other than unemployment. Our full-time faculty are the lowest paid of all the community colleges in California.
And if faculty, professional workers with advanced degrees, are suffering, imagine what our students are enduring? Over 84% of students in our district suffer from housing insecurity, including the inability to pay full rent or mortgage for one or more months, the inability to pay utilities, threats of eviction, or having to choose between food and housing. Some student leaders are starting to talk about getting affordable public housing on our community college campus, to meet important basic needs for students and faculty and staff who are struggling.
Together, those of us being pushed out by the changing job market and the digital revolution can be a powerful force for change. We need leaders that recognize rainy days and use the vast common wealth produced by society to prevent torrential downpours.
We can have quality public education for all, decent working conditions, and homes. We can hold the government accountable to provide for our basic needs. If our government leaders are too controlled by their corporate rulers to do so, then it is time for new leaders!

PT Logo collage
+ Articles by this author

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

ICE Fears Put Pregnant Immigrants and Their Babies at Risk

Fear of deportation is deterring people without permanent legal status from critical care. Doctors are worried for the health of pregnant immigrants, and the health of their pregnancies. This story was originally reported by 19thnews.org.

Government Shutdown and the Blame Game

Using a bold-faced lie President Trump and Vice President Vance blamed immigrants, particularly the undocumented, for the government shutdown now in effect throughout the country. The Republican plan would increase Obamacare payments and make Medicaid cuts.

Emmy-Winning Journalist Deported After Reporting on Anti-Trump Protest

Emmy award-winning journalist Mario Guevara was deported to El Salvador – a country he fled over 20 years ago — in retaliation for filming law enforcement activities, says the Committee to Protect Journalists.

A Salute to Chicagoans Fighting ICE

A salute to Chicagoans fighting ICE and to the food delivery worker on a bicycle who outrode ICE agents after they tried to kidnap him on the streets of downtown Chicago.

Over 60 Lawmakers Launch Investigation Into Trump Administration’s Disappearances

Some Democrats in Congress have announced they are investigating the Trump administration’s practice of disappearing immigrants to other countries.

More from the People's Tribune