Student Senate for California Community Colleges
Coordinates: 38°34′18.8″N 121°29′42.2″W / 38.571889°N 121.495056°W
Predecessor | Unincorporated SSCCC |
---|---|
Formation | April 29, 2015 |
Type | Nonprofit corporation |
47–5327498, tax status: 501(c)(3) exemption | |
Registration no. | C3782868 |
Legal status | Active, definition of |
Purpose | Charitable, R.C.T. file number CT0227572 |
Headquarters |
1102 Q Street (map) 5th Floor, Sacramento California 95811 |
Methods |
Legislative advocacy and participation in state-level shared governance |
Dahlia Salem | |
Mark Alcorn | |
Foundation for California Community Colleges | |
Omar Paz Jr. | |
Victor Costa et al. (up to 30 directors) | |
Website | studentsenateccc.org |
Student Senate for California Community Colleges (SSCCC) is a nonprofit corporation. It was formed under the California "Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation Law" on April 29, 2015.[1]
SSCCC is organized for "charitable purposes" and for the "specific purposes" stated in its articles of incorporation. SSCCC endeavors to "improve student access, promote student success, engage and empower local student leaders, and enrich the collegiate experience for all California community college students".[2]
The activities of SSCCC are conducted and its powers are exercised by or under the direction of a "board of directors", as required by law.[3]
History
Establishment and incorporation
Section 76060.5 of the California Education Code was enacted in 1987.[4] That section provided for the collection and disbursement of "student representation fees". An unincorporated entity named Student Senate for California Community Colleges was organized on May 7, 2006.[5] That entity was funded, in part, by student representation fees.
In 2013 the unincorporated entity supported the amendment of Section 76060.5.[6][7] Amendments to Section 76060.5 were enacted and became effective on January 1, 2014. The amendments provide, in part, that "a statewide community college student organization" must be "established as a legal entity registered with the Secretary of State" in order to qualify to receive distributions of student representation fees from the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges.[8] A nonprofit California corporation named Student Senate for California Community Colleges was established in 2015 as a means of fulfilling the "legal entity" requirement in Section 76060.5, as amended.
Predecessor organizations
The unincorporated SSCCC was established in May 2006. It was preceded by several similar organizations: the California Junior College Association;[9] the California Community College Student Government Association;[10] the Community College Student Lobby;[11] and the California Student Association of Community Colleges (CalSACC).[12]
CalSACC was established in 1987. By 2005, CalSACC's membership had dwindled to just 27 student body associations (about one-quarter of the total number of student body associations).[13] CalSACC ceased operating in 2007 and in 2008 CalSACC's remaining assets[14] were donated to the unincorporated SSCCC. The sum of $57,150.53 was transferred to the SSCCC on June 3, 2008.[15]
CalSACC had ten organizational subdivisions, which were called “regions”. During the gradual disintegration and ultimate dissolution of CalSACC, its regions continued functioning autonomously. On May 6 and 7, 2006, community college student leaders from throughout California gathered at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in San Diego, California. They considered several model constitutions for a new statewide student organization. They chose a constitutional model that grouped the former CalSACC regions together under the name “Student Senate for California Community Colleges”. Then, each of the ten regions selected two representatives, and those 20 representatives ratified the SSCCC constitution on May 7, 2006. The regions subsequently changed their names to reflect the fact that they had become regions of the SSCCC.
Noteworthy events
On March 5, 2012 the SSCCC, the California State Student Association, and the University of California Student Association sponsored a rally at the California State Capitol. About 8,000 people gathered on the western steps of the capitol and listened to speeches by student leaders and by state leaders, including Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, Assembly Speaker John Pérez, and Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg.[16] After the rally, protestors from the Occupy movement entered the capitol and refused to leave. Officers of the California Highway Patrol arrested 72 people for trespassing.[17] These events generated dozens of news reports.[18]
Lobbying
Education Code Section 76060.5 authorizes the collection and expenditure of student representation fees. Subdivision (c)(1) of Section 76060.5 provides that such fees "shall be expended to establish and support the operations of a statewide community college student organization, recognized by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, with effective student representation and participation in state-level community college shared governance and with governmental affairs representatives to advocate before the Legislature and other state and local governmental entities".
SSCCC's representatives participate in state-level community college shared governance by serving as members of a "Consultation Council" established by the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges. SSCCC's representatives also engage in legislative advocacy by contacting members of the California Legislature and by testifying before committees of the Legislature. Efforts to influence the decisions of California legislators and officials must be conducted in accordance with the Political Reform Act of 1974 (commencing with California Government Code Section 81000). The provisions of that Act are administered by the Political Reform Division of the California Secretary of State's office.
References
- ↑ Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation Law; Corporations Code Section 5110.
- ↑ Article II,B,1, Articles of Incorporation of Student Senate for California Community Colleges.
- ↑ "Board of directors". Corporations Code Section 5210.
- ↑ Assembly Bill No. 2576 proposed the enactment of Education Code Section 76060.5. That bill was drafted by Gregory G. Hayes, Vice President of the Student Association of American River College. It was introduced by Assembly Member Tom Hayden and signed into law by Governor George Deukmejian. The bill was chaptered by Secretary of State March Fong Eu as Chapter 1238 of the Statutes of 1987 (pages 4400–4401).
- ↑ Roselada, Pauline. "ASSC students attend Student Senate Assembly". The Skyline View, May 14, 2006.
- ↑ Senate Committee on Education (2013). "Bill Analysis". California State Senate, "SUPPORT" by SSCCC, page 8.
- ↑ SSCCC (2013). "Support community college student representation – AB 1358". Change.org.
- ↑ California Education Code Section 76060.5, as amended by Chapter 714 of the Statutes of 2013; Assembly Bill No. 1358, introduced by Assembly Member Paul Fong.
- ↑ Winter, Carl G. “History of the Junior College Movement in California”. California State Department of Education, December 21, 1964.
- ↑ California Community College Student Government Association; in Opinions of the California Attorney General, Volume 65, page 638 (1982), cited in Funeral Security Plans, Inc., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. State Board of Funeral Directors et al., Defendant and Appellant.
- ↑ Community College Student Lobby; California Secretary of State's file number C1096599.
- ↑ California Student Association of Community Colleges; in Chapter 35 of the Statutes of 2007.
- ↑ SSCCC (2008). "A History of Student Representation". A PowerPoint presentation, page 10.
- ↑ Remaining assets; California Corporations Code Section 18130.
- ↑ Donations and Grants made to the SSCCC.
- ↑ hÉochaidh, Roibín Ó. "Students rally in Sacramento against public-education cuts". UC Berkeley News Center, The Regents of the University of California, March 6, 2012.
- ↑ Asimov, Nanette. "Sacramento higher-ed protest leads to 72 arrests". SFGate, March 6, 2012.
- ↑ "March in March" articles and photographs archive. City College of San Francisco.