San Francisco to offer free community
college to residents: mayor
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[February 08, 2017]
By Curtis Skinner
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - San Francisco
Mayor Ed Lee said on Tuesday the city would become the first in the
United States to offer tuition-free community college to its residents,
framing the move as a way of helping to narrow wealth inequality in the
city.
The $5.4 million plan also includes $500 grants to low-income City
College of San Francisco students to spend on books, transportation,
school supplies and healthcare, Lee said in a posting on online
publishing site Medium.com. Grants of $200 would also be made available
to poor part-time students, he said.
"At a time when the political rhetoric is punishing those who are less
fortunate, San Francisco has again united around our values and taken
the national lead on this important issue of equality," Lee said.
The college charges $46 per unit, according to its website. The plan is
to take effect in the fall and the city will provide the college
$500,000 to help with implementation.
San Francisco Supervisor Jane Kim spearheaded the initiative. Kim was
endorsed last year by U.S. Senator and presidential candidate Bernie
Sanders in her unsuccessful state senate bid.
Both she and Sanders ran campaigns that focused in part on dealing with
the crisis of student debt, which totals more than $1 trillion in the
United States.
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During a news conference on Monday, Kim said San Francisco has "the
fastest growing income gap of any city across the nation," citing
research from the Brookings Institute.
"We as politicians, as policymakers are responsible for at least
trying to reverse those trends. And one of the best ways we can do
that is investing in our citizens," she said.
The plan aims to increase enrollment at the community college by 20
percent.
The San Francisco Chronicle newspaper reported that funding will
come from a real estate transfer tax that was approved by voters
last November.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
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