Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
UC Merced, Born Because of Politics, Is CA's Expensive Stepchild 20 Years Later
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 3 hours ago on
December 13, 2024

UC Merced's 20th anniversary prompts reflection on its challenges and unfulfilled promises as California's newest public university. (CalMatters/Larry Valenzuela)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The Legislature’s budget analyst, Gabe Petek, is marking the 20th anniversary of University of California’s Merced campus with an overview of how it has fared.

Dan Walters Profile Picture
Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

In polite language, Petek fundamentally says the campus has fallen well short of its enrollment targets, requires much more state aid than other UC branches to operate, has not had the big economic impact that its advocates promised, and really wasn’t needed to relieve student applications.

“Since 2005, the UC system has added approximately 44,000 resident undergraduate slots,” Petek writes. “The 7,500 undergraduate slots created at UC Merced accounts for 17 percent of that growth. While contributing to the increase in UC enrollment capacity, UC Merced has repeatedly failed to meet its campus enrollment targets.

“Moreover, enrolling additional students at UC Merced comes with a higher state cost than enrolling additional students at the more established UC campuses. The $85 million in UC Merced funding above the rebenching formula equates to roughly an additional 10,000 students that could have been supported at the other UC general campuses, many of which had available capacity.”

The rebenching formula is how the UC system equalizes funding across its campuses.

Skepticism Surrounding UC Merced’s Creation

Reading Petek’s report was, to quote the inimitable Yogi Berra, “déjà vu all over again,” because I had written a number of skeptical columns about the UC Merced project that then-Gov. Gray Davis and other advocates were touting in the early 2000s.

Much of the political pressure was coming from those who owned land around the proposed campus and were hoping to make a financial killing. They included the head of a major state agency and a UC regent.

“Merced was chosen for the campus primarily because of the offer of free land, because of pressure from politicians who wanted to position themselves as saviors of the valley, a politically important region, and because developers wanted to make a killing on adjacent land — not as a result of any rational needs or efficiency studies,” I wrote in one column for the Sacramento Bee.

“If a UC campus is to be built in the San Joaquin Valley, locating it in or near a major population center — moribund downtown Fresno, with dozens of potentially usable buildings would be perfect — would make access much easier,” I wrote in another.

“More students could live at home, thereby reducing their living expenses, and that would make attendance more practical. But that simple, if vital, cost-of-living factor is being ignored by UC administrators, UC’s somewhat elitist Board of Regents and politicians in their relentless drive to create a new campus out in the middle of nowhere.”

At the time, UC system executives were almost universally opposed to placing a new campus in Merced because it would siphon away construction and operational funds that, they thought, would be better spent elsewhere. However, they never voiced that opposition publicly because the Board of Regents, composed of governors’ appointees, and Davis were insisting that it be done.

Political Pressure and Environmental Challenges

Much of the political pressure was coming from those who owned land around the proposed campus and were hoping to make a financial killing. They included the head of a major state agency and a UC regent.

A charitable land trust donated the proposed campus site, but it ran afoul of federal environmental officials because it contained numerous vernal pools that sustained fairy shrimp, an endangered species found only in the San Joaquin Valley.

When it became evident that the original campus site was a non-starter, it was shifted to a nearby golf course, also owned by the land trust and purchased with a foundation grant. The golf course was a failing business so it was a double win for the trust, which intended to develop housing and other student services.

In short, the motives of Merced campus advocates, both public and private, had only tangential connections to educational needs, and two decades later that’s still true. UC Merced is the system’s poor stepchild.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more columns by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to bmcewen@gvwire.com for consideration.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Fresno Trustees Inch Closer to Hiring a New Superintendent

DON'T MISS

Supreme Court Will Take Up a Challenge Related to California’s Tough Vehicle Emissions Standards

DON'T MISS

Why CA Needs to Double-Down on Its Apprenticeship Programs

DON'T MISS

Fresno Council Changes Rules on Presidency, Vice Presidency

DON'T MISS

De’Vondre Campbell Won’t Be With 49ers After Refusing to Play: Shanahan

DON'T MISS

Country Star Morgan Wallen Sentenced in Chair-Throwing Case

DON'T MISS

County Leaders OK Stop-Gap Agreements for Merced, Livingston Fire Service

DON'T MISS

UC Merced, Born Because of Politics, Is CA’s Expensive Stepchild 20 Years Later

DON'T MISS

Friant Agrees to Hold Water Board Retreats in Valley, Not Distant Swanky Resorts

DON'T MISS

Willy Adames Plans to Play Every Day for Giants and Bring Them Championships

UP NEXT

Supreme Court Will Take Up a Challenge Related to California’s Tough Vehicle Emissions Standards

UP NEXT

Why CA Needs to Double-Down on Its Apprenticeship Programs

UP NEXT

Fresno Council Changes Rules on Presidency, Vice Presidency

UP NEXT

De’Vondre Campbell Won’t Be With 49ers After Refusing to Play: Shanahan

UP NEXT

Country Star Morgan Wallen Sentenced in Chair-Throwing Case

UP NEXT

County Leaders OK Stop-Gap Agreements for Merced, Livingston Fire Service

UP NEXT

UC Merced, Born Because of Politics, Is CA’s Expensive Stepchild 20 Years Later

UP NEXT

Friant Agrees to Hold Water Board Retreats in Valley, Not Distant Swanky Resorts

UP NEXT

Willy Adames Plans to Play Every Day for Giants and Bring Them Championships

UP NEXT

49ers LB De’Vondre Campbell Refuses to Play Against Rams

Fresno Council Changes Rules on Presidency, Vice Presidency

2 hours ago

De’Vondre Campbell Won’t Be With 49ers After Refusing to Play: Shanahan

2 hours ago

Country Star Morgan Wallen Sentenced in Chair-Throwing Case

2 hours ago

County Leaders OK Stop-Gap Agreements for Merced, Livingston Fire Service

2 hours ago

UC Merced, Born Because of Politics, Is CA’s Expensive Stepchild 20 Years Later

3 hours ago

Friant Agrees to Hold Water Board Retreats in Valley, Not Distant Swanky Resorts

4 hours ago

Willy Adames Plans to Play Every Day for Giants and Bring Them Championships

5 hours ago

49ers LB De’Vondre Campbell Refuses to Play Against Rams

5 hours ago

UNLV Hires Former Florida Coach Dan Mullen as Its New Football Coach

5 hours ago

Teenage Prodigy Gukesh Dommaraju Becomes Youngest Chess World Champion

5 hours ago

Fresno Trustees Inch Closer to Hiring a New Superintendent

The Fresno Unified School Board will hold a special workshop meeting next Thursday to develop “goals and guardrails” for the dis...

3 minutes ago

3 minutes ago

Fresno Trustees Inch Closer to Hiring a New Superintendent

The Supreme Court is framed by the columns of the Capitol in Washington, Dec. 3, 2024. (AP File)
1 hour ago

Supreme Court Will Take Up a Challenge Related to California’s Tough Vehicle Emissions Standards

2 hours ago

Why CA Needs to Double-Down on Its Apprenticeship Programs

2 hours ago

Fresno Council Changes Rules on Presidency, Vice Presidency

2 hours ago

De’Vondre Campbell Won’t Be With 49ers After Refusing to Play: Shanahan

2 hours ago

Country Star Morgan Wallen Sentenced in Chair-Throwing Case

2 hours ago

County Leaders OK Stop-Gap Agreements for Merced, Livingston Fire Service

3 hours ago

UC Merced, Born Because of Politics, Is CA’s Expensive Stepchild 20 Years Later

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend