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COMPTON : College Gets Exception on Teachers’ Salaries

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A state governing board has granted Compton College an exemption from a law that requires community colleges to spend at least half of their annual budgets on teachers’ salaries.

The college spent 47% of its $10.8-million budget on teachers in the 1993-94 fiscal year, falling short of the state-mandated minimum by about $335,000, officials said.

The 12-member California Community Colleges Board of Governors, which oversees the state’s 106 community colleges, recently decided to grant the exemption after it was determined that the college had more than $500,000 in unanticipated costs, mainly on legal fees, and exceeded its budget for maintenance and equipment purchases.

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The extra legal expenses that year stemmed from an investigation in which two employees were accused of misspending federal grant money that had been earmarked for low-income students. As a result of the investigation, one employee was fired and another was asked to resign.

The intent of the statute, commonly known as the “50% Law,” is to limit class size and reduce the growth of administrative and other non-instructional costs.

Compton was the only community college in the state that did not meet the 50% requirement in 1993-94, said Melanie Bedwell, spokeswoman for the California Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office.

The college is planning to comply with the law this year, said Lester Vierra, dean of academic affairs.

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