05/06/2008 GAAS:230:08 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Print Version | En Español | Email / Share
Gov. Schwarzenegger Applauds $70 Million Private Gift to California Community College Students
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger joined with
California Community Colleges (CCC) Chancellor
Diane Woodruff today to announce an unprecedented commitment of $70 million from
the Bernard Osher Foundation to support private scholarships for California's community
college students. The commitment is made as part of the Osher Initiative for CCC
students and represents the single largest gift to a community college system in
the nation and one of the largest gifts ever made to higher
education.
"I am pleased to announce this historic
gift by the Bernard Osher Foundation that will help thousands of our state's
community college students succeed each year," said Governor Schwarzenegger. "I
know firsthand the incredible value of community colleges from my time at
Santa Monica
College. They serve a vital
role in preparing our workforce, and this gift will provide innumerable benefits
to our state's economy and diverse communities."
The Osher Initiative includes two separate
monetary commitments that will assist students with $1,000 scholarships at each
of California's 109 community colleges. A $50
million gift will support endowed annual scholarships at CCCs, $25 million of
which is forthcoming immediately to fund an endowment managed by the Foundation
for California Community Colleges (FCCC).
The remaining $25 million will be
contributed to the endowment on a two-to-one match. The FCCC will lead a joint
effort with the CCC System Office and state's community colleges to raise a
matching $50 million over a three-year period. The resulting $100 million
endowment will serve as a permanent fund for annual student scholarships,
offering a long-term solution to the rising costs of books, supplies and
equipment that often hinder many students from completing their education. Once
the endowment is fully funded, it is expected that at least 5,000 scholarships
will be awarded annually with that number continuing to grow each
year.
In addition to the $50 million gift, the
Osher Initiative provides $20 million to support endowed scholarship programs at
California State University (CSU) and University of California (UC) campuses
that do not currently have Osher scholarship programs in place. These
scholarship programs will be for community college students transferring to the
CSU and UC campuses.
"Bernard and Barbro Osher and the Osher
Foundation's trustees are making this gift to underscore the importance of our
nation's community colleges, to help address persistent financial needs and to
encourage private philanthropy to support these institutions," said Mary
Bitterman, President of the Bernard Osher
Foundation.
"We are all overjoyed about this historic
and unprecedented gift to the California Community Colleges," said California
Community Colleges Chancellor Diane Woodruff. "The Osher scholarships will
provide much needed financial support to many of our students who may not
otherwise be able to complete their studies."
There are more than 2.6 million students
enrolled in CCCs, making it the largest higher education system in the nation.
Community colleges enroll the state's lowest income students-full time students
have an annual median income of $16,223 and one-fourth of those students have
incomes of less than $5,544 per year.
CCCs are also among the most affordable
higher education systems. At $20 per unit, student fees at California's
community colleges are currently the lowest in the nation-just 24 percent of the
national average.
Community colleges are a gateway to
California's
four-year universities. Sixty percent of CSU and 30 percent of UC graduates are
community college transfers. They are also a leading provider of job training
and career tech education. Eighty percent of firefighters, law enforcement
officers and emergency medical technicians are credentialed at
community colleges, and seventy percent of the nurses in
California
received their education from community colleges.


