Friday, May 3, 2024

UncategorizedBREAKING: Good news – for the moment – on...

BREAKING: Good news – for the moment – on City College

By Tim Redmond

The news that the ACCJC will change its rules and allow City College to stay open for two more years is grounds to celebrate – for the moment. But let’s not declare victory too soon.

The accreditors only blinked and made a simple, obvious rules change under the combined weight of the Bay Area Congressional delegation, the state superintendent, 60 community college chancellors, and pretty much every elected official and business leader in San Francisco. And City College doesn’t have its accreditation back – the same unaccountable private agency that started this whole mess will still have the school’s fate in its hands.

“The crazy people are still in control,” Community College Board member Rafael Mandelman told me. “And they will still do this to other schools.”

Mandelman said it’s important that the people who fought for this rule change and an extension for CCSF not step back and assume that all is well with the ACCJC – because it isn’t.

And there’s still the little matter of when the people we elected to run City College will get their jobs back.

The contract for the special trustee who was appointed to take full control of the school ends in July, and the state chancellor will have to decide whether to extend it for another year – or to allow the elected college board to take the school back. “There has been no work to consult with the board, no work to prepare the board to resume governance, nothing,” Mandelman said.

I think the ACCJC got the message that it can’t shut down City College, and is trying to cover its ass with this delay. But there’s no fundamental change in the agency’s operating procedures or leadership. So we won a battle – but the war is far from over.

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.

Featured

The alarming agenda of the big-money folks trying to take over SF

New report tracks the anti-union, anti-tax, pro-police program that a small number of very rich people want to impose on SF in the name of "moderate" politics.

How Irving Penn brought the world to his studio—and vice versa

de Young retrospective teases out sheer range of the photographer's lens.

Under the Stars: Bubbling up with foamboy, night-dubbing with Monty Luke…

BALTHVS rocks global vibes, Eris Drew runs the rave tape, Neutrals wish you were here, more music to support!

More by this author

Everyone loves Vienna’s housing policy; there’s a reason that it works so well

It's not 'rocket science.' It's high taxes on the rich and money for social housing. The tech barons want people who support those policies in SF voted out.

Breed hedges on supporting legal protections, rent relief for tenants

Weirdly, she suggests that her own office can't stop 'abuse' in program that helped 20,000 renters keep a roof over their heads.

Protecting a program that saves hundreds from becoming unhoused …

... and was a shooting where the cops fired 99 rounds just a 'policy failure?' That's The Agenda for April 28-May 5
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED