611 San Juan Hills Seniors in the Class of 2018
404 San Juan Hills Seniors met UC/CSU Requirements
76 San Juan Hills Seniors in the Top 12.5% of the Class of 2018
29 San Juan Hills Seniors Enrolled in a UC School
47 Top 12.5% seniors were placed in the referral pool Referral Pool
The Law
The University of California Master Plan Mandate and State Law require the University of California to provide an "appropriate" seat for all students in the Top 12.5% of their High School graduating class.
The University of California is a taxpayer funded educational institution that operates under a Master Plan that requires California residents to be given "priority" enrollment.
State law affirms the State’s commitment to fund all eligible California residents:
"The University of California and the California State University are expected to plan that adequate spaces are available to accommodate all California resident students who are eligible and likely to apply to attend an appropriate place within the system".
"The State of California likewise reaffirms its historic commitment to ensure that resources are provided to make this expansion possible, and shall commit resources to ensure that [eligible] students ….. are accommodated in a place within the system.” [CA Education Code 66202.5]
163 San Juan Hills Students filed 586 Applications to the University of California.
San Juan Hills Students Cost of Application Fees |
586 applications X $70 application fee = $41,020 |
The UC used to have a single application that allowed you to apply to 1 or all campuses |
163 Applications X $70 application fee = $11,410 |
The Difference aka... Increased Revenue to the University of California |
$29,610 |
The University of California gave 77 students 122 Admits.
29 Tesoro Students Enrolled in a UC. It appears that 47 Tesoro students may have been placed in the referral pool and only offered UC Merced.
Campus |
Enrolled |
Referral Pool |
Berkeley |
5 |
|
Davis |
0 |
|
Irvine |
3 |
|
UCLA |
6 |
|
Merced |
4 |
47 |
Riverside |
0 |
|
San Diego |
0 |
|
Santa Barbara |
5 |
|
Santa Cruz |
0 |
|
? |
6 |
|
Total |
29 |
|
The actual number of students placed in the referral pool can only be confirmed with a Public Records Request. Both the California Auditor and the LAO did rights to know to get the referral pool data. It can be presumed by looking at enrollment by School University wide vs by Campus.
99% of students offered UC Merced do not choose to attend because they are "Over Qualified" for UC Merced. This forces Tesoro High Schools highest achieving students to go to college at a Private University or Out of State to find a college comparable to UC flagship schools like UC Berkeley or UCLA.
Financial Damage to Tesoro Families:
Cost to San Juan Hills High School student |
Out of State/Private Tuition |
$55,000 |
220,000 |
UC Tuuition per year |
$15,000 |
$60,000 |
Difference |
$40,000 |
$160,000 |
47 Students X $160,000 = $7.52 million dollars taken out of the local economy
|
Unjust Enrichment by the University of California at the expense of California taxpayers:
Increased "Profit" to the University of CA when it "Sells" a Seat |
Average UC Tuition: CA Resident |
$15,000 |
Nonresident Supplemental Tuition |
$30,000 |
Total |
$45.000 |
UC Profit from "selling" a seat $45,000 (Average nonresident tuition) |
$45,000 |
UC has already been paid $30,000 for that seat in California taxpayer money |
$30,000 |
Total UC Revenue for "selling" 1 seat |
$75,000 |
The UC sold 47 San Juan Hills High School Seats X $75,000 per seat
$75,000 X 47 = $3,525,000
UC Increased revenue over 4 years = 14,100,000
UC unjustly enriched by $14.1 million
|
|
UC unjustly enriched by $14 million |
$14,000,000 |
UNJUST ENRICHMENT
The UC is profiting at the expense of hard working and deserving San Juan Hills students, in violation of State law and their Master Plan Mandate which requires the University of California to provide "qualified" California resident students with "priority" enrollment. The University of California has a mandate to provide these students with an "appropriate" admit to a school they are qualified to attend. A referral to UC Merced when an applicant is "qualified" for UCLA or UC Berkeley is a violation of State Law and the University of California's Master Plan Mandate.
Any student that has been denied an "appropriate" admit is entitled to an "appropriate" admit or financial compensation so that they can afford to attend a 4-year Private University or Out-Of State College without being financially penalized.
The University of California cannot be allowed to continue to deny California Residents educational opportunity in order to unjustly enrich itself at the expense of California taxpayers.
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