Crime & Safety

Santa Monica College Superintendent: Students' Actions Regrettable

Santa Monica College Superintendent Chui L. Tsang reacts after as many as 30 student demonstrators are pepper-sprayed on campus. Hundreds of students from Beverly Hills attend the college.

It's regrettable that hundreds of student protesters stormed the Santa Monica College Board of Trustees meeting Tuesday night, disrupting the meeting and setting off fire alarms, Superintendent Chui L. Tsang said Wednesday in a statement.

As many as 30 of the students and college staffers were treated by firefighters  after a campus police officer discharged pepper spray, hospitalizing three people.

Tsang said the police used pepper spray to "preserve public and personal safety." He did not weigh in on the use of pepper spray to quell the crowd.

Find out what's happening in Beverly Hillswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

"Santa Monica College regrets that a group of people chose to disrupt a public meeting in an unlawful manner," Tsang said. "Although a number of participants at the meeting engaged in unlawful conduct, Santa Monica College police personnel exercised restraint and made no arrests."

Find out what's happening in Beverly Hillswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The angry students were rallying in opposition to the college offering higher-priced courses this summer and winter that aren't subsidized by the state. The to save classes that would otherwise be eliminated in the wake of state budget cuts.

They will augment 700 regularly scheduled state-subsidized classes at $46 per credit unit for California residents, an increase of 25 percent more classes than last summer. Approximately 50 extra self-funded classes in the pilot program will be offered at the college’s actual cost, which is $180 per credit unit, or $540 for a typical 3-unit course.

"As California’s public post-secondary educational capacity contracts, so do the life prospects of many young Californians. A tragic number of students are currently being turned away from community colleges and CSU campuses," Tsang said. "SMC’s move comes in the midst of a State budget crisis that has had devastating effects on college students in California for the last four years."

In reacting to the campus police's use of pepper spray, Trustee Judge Finkel called it a "black eye" on the college.

Tsang said students who were pepper-sprayed could submit their hospital bills to the Student Affairs Office.

Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and "Like" us on Facebook.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

To request removal of your name from an arrest report, submit these required items to arrestreports@patch.com.