Back to California

SB-148 • 2026

Higher education budget trailer bill.

Higher education budget trailer bill.

Budget Education Housing Labor Technology
Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review (S) - ()
Last action
2025-10-13
Official status
Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 745, Statutes of 2025.
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary does not provide complete details on the allocation of $49.734 million from the Public School System Stabilization Account, so this information is incomplete.

Higher Education Budget Changes

This law requires community colleges to provide food pantry services for classified employees, updates the Middle Class Scholarship Program rules, and allocates funds for educational resources.

What This Bill Does

  • Requires each community college campus to provide classified employees with access to food pantry services offered by Basic Needs Centers and report data related to this service.
  • Updates the Middle Class Scholarship Program (MCSP) so that small scholarships do not affect award amounts.
  • Allows grant recipients to use funds for developing open educational resource materials and establishing statewide infrastructure.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Community college students
  • Classified employees at community colleges

Terms To Know

Basic Needs Coordinator
A person at each community college campus who helps students with basic needs like food and housing.
Middle Class Scholarship Program (MCSP)
A program that gives scholarships to undergraduate students based on their financial need.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify how the additional services for classified employees will be funded.
  • Details about the new statewide open educational resources infrastructure are not fully explained in the summary.

Bill History

  1. 2025-10-13 California Legislative Information

    Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 745, Statutes of 2025.

  2. 2025-10-13 California Legislative Information

    Approved by the Governor.

  3. 2025-09-15 California Legislative Information

    Enrolled and presented to the Governor at 3:30 p.m.

  4. 2025-09-12 California Legislative Information

    Assembly amendments concurred in. (Ayes 29. Noes 0. Page 2953.) Ordered to engrossing and enrolling.

  5. 2025-09-12 California Legislative Information

    In Senate. Concurrence in Assembly amendments pending.

  6. 2025-09-11 California Legislative Information

    Read third time. Passed. (Ayes 63. Noes 12. Page 3322.) Ordered to the Senate.

  7. 2025-09-10 California Legislative Information

    Ordered to third reading.

  8. 2025-09-10 California Legislative Information

    Withdrawn from committee.

  9. 2025-09-10 California Legislative Information

    Assembly Rule 96 suspended. (Ayes 56. Noes 19. Page 3164.)

  10. 2025-09-08 California Legislative Information

    From committee with author's amendments. Read second time and amended. Re-referred to Com. on BUDGET.

  11. 2025-03-24 California Legislative Information

    Referred to Com. on BUDGET.

  12. 2025-03-20 California Legislative Information

    In Assembly. Read first time. Held at Desk.

  13. 2025-03-20 California Legislative Information

    Read third time. Passed. (Ayes 28. Noes 10. Page 446.) Ordered to the Assembly.

  14. 2025-03-18 California Legislative Information

    Read second time. Ordered to third reading.

  15. 2025-03-17 California Legislative Information

    Ordered to second reading.

  16. 2025-03-17 California Legislative Information

    Withdrawn from committee. (Ayes 27. Noes 10. Page 384.)

  17. 2025-02-05 California Legislative Information

    Referred to Com. on B. & F. R.

  18. 2025-01-24 California Legislative Information

    From printer. May be acted upon on or after February 23.

  19. 2025-01-23 California Legislative Information

    Introduced. Read first time. To Com. on RLS. for assignment. To print.

Official Summary Text

SB 148, Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review.
Higher education budget trailer bill.
(1) Existing law requires each campus of the California Community Colleges to establish the position of Basic Needs Coordinator to assist students with on- and off-campus housing, food, mental health, and other basic needs services and resources, among other responsibilities, and to establish a Basic Needs Center where basic needs services and resources, including food services and resources, and staff are made available to students, as specified. Existing law requires each community college campus to report specified information related to basic needs services and resources to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, and requires the chancellor’s office to develop and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual report based on, among other things,
the data and information reported by campuses.
This bill would require, for the 2026–27 and 2027–28 fiscal years, each community college campus to provide classified employees with access to food pantry services offered by the Basic Needs Centers and report data and information related to that access to the chancellor’s office, as specified, and would require the annual reports submitted by the chancellor’s office to include that data and information. By expanding the services provided by Basic Needs Centers, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(2) Existing law establishes the Middle Class Scholarship Program (MCSP) under the administration of the Student Aid Commission. Existing law, subject to an available and sufficient appropriation, makes an undergraduate student eligible for a scholarship award under the MCSP if the student is enrolled at the University of California or the
California State University, or enrolled in upper division coursework in a community college baccalaureate program, and meets certain eligibility requirements. Existing law generally sets the MCSP award at an amount that equals the difference between the student’s cost of attendance and the sum of other scholarships, grants, or fee waivers, including those administered by federal, state, and institutions, awarded to the student in excess of $7,898 in expected student contribution, and, for dependent students with a household income exceeding $100,000, a percentage of the parents’ contribution, as specified.
If a federal, state, or institutionally administered student need-based scholarship, grant, or fee waiver of less than $300 is identified following determination of a student’s MCSP award, this bill, for purposes of determining the student’s MCSP award amount, would not require the student’s MCSP award to be recalculated. The bill would require each institution
participating in the MCSP to sign an institutional participation agreement with the commission acknowledging the institution’s willingness to administer the MCSP program, as specified.
(3) Existing law establishes the Zero-Textbook-Cost Degree Grant Program to reduce the overall cost of education for students and to decrease the time it takes students to complete degree programs offered by community colleges. Existing law requires the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges to distribute grants to community college districts that meet specified criteria to develop and implement associate degrees or career technical education certificate programs earned entirely by completing courses that eliminate conventional textbook costs by using alternative instructional materials and methodologies, including open educational resources. Existing law authorizes grant recipients to use the funds for developing and implementing degrees to obtain
professional development and technical assistance to assist in the development of degrees.
This bill would authorize grant recipients to also use the funds for developing and implementing degrees to obtain professional development and technical assistance to assist in the development of open educational resource materials. The bill would authorize the chancellor’s office to allocate any unallocated resources appropriated for purposes of the program, on or after June 30, 2025, to a community college district to contract for the establishment of statewide open educational resources infrastructure, as provided.
(4) Existing law requires the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges to adopt regulations providing for the payment of apportionments to community college districts on a specified schedule. Existing law, notwithstanding
that provision referenced above, adjusts the payment of apportionments to community college districts for the 2024–25 fiscal year to defer $243,693,000 of those payments to the 2025–26 fiscal year in accordance with a designated schedule.
This bill would specifically reference two items of appropriation made in the Budget Act of 2025 as the funding source of the deferral payment described above.
(5) The California Constitution establishes the Public School System Stabilization Account in the General Fund to provide a reserve for public school funding. The California Constitution requires, pursuant to specified calculations, the Controller to transfer certain moneys from the General Fund into the Public School System Stabilization Account for subsequent allocation to school districts and community college districts in fiscal years when the minimum state funding obligation for the support of school
districts and community college districts falls below specified levels.
The California Constitution authorizes the Legislature, upon the Governor’s proclamation declaring a budget emergency, as described, to enact a statute that, among other things, appropriates funds in the Public School System Stabilization Account for the support of school districts and community college districts.
This bill would appropriate $49,734,000 from the Public School System Stabilization Account to be transferred by the Controller to Section B of the State School Fund for the support of community college districts, as provided.
(6) Existing law encourages community colleges to develop and implement Mathematics, Engineering, Science, Achievement (MESA) programs directed at identifying students
affected by social, economic, and educational disadvantages, increasing the number of eligible students served under MESA programs, and increasing student success in transferring and completing baccalaureate degree programs in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics majors at 4-year higher education institutions, as specified. Existing law requires the board of governors to adopt regulations for purposes of MESA programs and requires those regulations to be consistent with specified requirements and accomplish certain goals.
This bill, beginning in the 2026–27 fiscal year, would prohibit the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges from reserving more than 3.5% of funds appropriated for MESA programs on administrative and discretionary costs of supporting MESA programs, and would authorize the chancellor, in consultation with the California Community College Association of MESA Directors, to allocate the reserved funds solely for statewide
coordination and enhancement of MESA programs.
(7) Existing law appropriates $20,000,000 from the General Fund to the board of governors to support emergency financial assistance grants to students attending a community college. Existing law requires the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges to allocate these funds to community college district’s based on each district’s share of total California Dream Act application (CADAA) filers that also received a Cal Grant systemwide.
This bill would authorize the chancellor’s office to reallocate those funds to community college districts to ensure all eligible CADAA filers receive a grant. The bill would require the chancellor’s office to report to the appropriate policy committees and budget subcommittees of the Legislature on the progress of community college districts in awarding the emergency financial assistance grants to students,
as specified.
(8) This bill, for the 2025–26 fiscal year, would make funding appropriated in the Budget Act of 2025 in certain items of appropriation for community colleges available for transfer by the Controller to Section B of the State School Fund for purposes of distributing those funds to community college districts.
(9) (A) This bill would incorporate additional changes to Section 66023.5 of the Education Code proposed by SB 271 to be operative only if this bill and SB 271 are enacted and this bill is enacted last.
(B) This bill would incorporate additional changes to Section 70022 of the Education Code proposed by AB 88 and SB 67 to be operative only if this bill and either, or both, of those bills are enacted and this bill is enacted last.
(10) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
(11) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Download Bill PDF