TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
State of California
JOHN K. VAN DE KAMP
Attorney General
______________________________________
OPINION :
: No. 90-701
of :
: JANUARY 3, 1991
JOHN K. VAN DE KAMP :
Attorney General :
:
CLAYTON P. ROCHE :
Deputy Attorney General :
:
______________________________________________________________________________
THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE CALIFORNIA COMMUNITY
COLLEGES has requested an opinion on the following questions:
1. When the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges distributes
funds to community college districts for student matriculation services, are such distributions subject
to approval by the Department of General Services?
2. May the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges distribute
funds to community college districts by grants without approval by the Department of General
Services, where the primary purpose of the funding is to assist the community college districts?
CONCLUSIONS
1. When the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges distributes
funds to community college districts for student matriculation services, such distributions are not
subject to approval by the Department of General Services.
2. The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges may distribute
funds to community college districts by grants without approval by the Department of General
Services, where the primary purpose of the funding is to assist the community college districts.
ANALYSIS
The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges ("Board") is
established as a unit of state government by section 71000 of the Education Code.1 The Board is
vested with numerous duties with respect to community colleges including such matters as
1
All section references are to the Education Code unless otherwise specified.
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developing and implementing "a comprehensive community college education and fiscal
accountability system" (§ 71020.5) and exercising "the duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities,
and jurisdiction heretofore vested in the State Board of Education, Superintendent of Public
Instruction, the Department of Education, and the Director of Education with respect to the
management, administration, and control of the community colleges" (§ 71024).
Community colleges themselves are not a part of state government, but are
established within individual community college districts, which are governed by their own
governing boards. (§ 72000 et seq.) This request for our opinion relates to the distribution of funds
by the Board to individual community college districts for certain purposes, and whether the terms
and conditions relating to these distributions are "contracts" which fall within the requirements of
the Public Contract Code, section 10100 et seq., relating to contracts made by state agencies. We
will discuss the distributions first and then relate these to the provisions of the Public Contract Code.
The first type of distribution at issue herein is that made pursuant to the Seymour-
Campbell Matriculation Act of 1986 (§ 78210 et seq.; "Act"). The Act is operative when state funds
are specifically appropriated for its purposes. (§ 78218.) The Chancellor of the Community
Colleges, who is the chief executive officer of the Board (§ 71090), is required to implement its
provisions in as many community colleges in the state as appropriated funds will permit. (§
78211.5.) The main thrust of the Act is to optimize the opportunities for success of students enrolled
in the community colleges. (§ 78211.) This will be done through the provision of "matriculation
services" by the colleges to their students. There services include such matters as processing
admission applications, orientation, counseling, identification of student aptitudes, evaluation of
study and learning skills, reference to specialized support services (e.g., financial assistance) and
post enrollment evaluation of each student's progress. (§ 78212.)
In return for the state funding, participating colleges are required to provide matching
funds in an amount established by the Chancellor. (§ 78216.) Also, "[a]ll participating districts
shall, with the assistance of the chancellor, establish and maintain institutional research to evaluate
the effectiveness of the matriculation services described by [the Act] . . . and of programs and
services designed to remedy students' skills deficiencies, using certain criteria for a data base for
such research." (§ 78214.) Additionally, each participating college must "develop a plan for student
matriculation that reflects all" of enumerated specified matters, such as a plan for actively providing
the "matriculation services" and "the development and training of staff and faculty to implement"
such services. (§ 78216.) Finally, the Chancellor is required to prepare reports for the Legislature
with respect to the effectiveness of the program, including progress reports and his recommendation.
(§ 78217.)
The second type of distribution at issue herein is nonspecific. We are informed that
the primary purpose of the funding will be to assist the districts. We are not given any facts as to
what the districts will "agree" to do in return for such funds. We assume that it would be at most
to provide a plan for the use of and an accounting for such funds. We also assume that such
distributions are otherwise permitted by law.
We turn now to the Public Contract Code and section 10100 et seq. relating to the
making of contracts by state agencies. There are four basic forms of contracts covered by these
sections: (1) construction contracts (i.e. for the erection, construction, alteration, repair and
improvement of public projects) governed by the State Contract Act, sections 10100-10285.5 of the
Public Contract Code; (2) procurement contracts, governed by sections 10295-10298 of the code;
(3) contracts for services, governed by sections 10335-10354 of the code; and (4) consulting service
contracts governed by sections 10355-10382 of the code.
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As to the two types of distributions under consideration herein, those for student
matriculation services and those to assist the community college districts generally, the first and last
types of contracts (construction contracts and consulting contracts) are not germane herein.
As to procurement contracts, section 10295 delineates the types of contracts covered
by sections 10295-10298 of the Public Contract Code. As pertinent herein, section 10295 states:
"All contracts entered into by any state agency for (a) the hiring or purchase
of equipment, supplies, materials, or elementary school textbooks, (b) services,
whether or not the services involve the furnishing or use of equipment, materials or
supplies or are performed by an independent contractor, (c) the construction,
alteration, improvement, repair or maintenance of property, real or personal, or (d)
the performance of work or services by the state agency for or in cooperation with
any person, or public body, are void unless and until approved by the department [of
General Services]. Every such contract shall be transmitted with all papers,
estimates, and recommendations concerning it to the department and, if approved by
the department, shall be effective from the date of the approval. This section shall
apply to any state agency which by general or specific statute is expressly or
impliedly authorized to enter into transactions referred to herein."
The key requirement of the statute is that the "contracts" specified therein must be approved by the
Department of General Services ("Department").
Sections 10335-10354 of the Public Contract Code contain detailed, supplemental
provisions governing contracts for services (see § 10295, subd. (b)) and provide that "[t]he
provisions of this article shall apply to all contracts entered into by any state agency for services to
be rendered to the state whether or not the same involves the furnishing or use of equipment,
materials or supplies or are performed by an independent contractor." This is the same language as
found in subdivision (b) of section 10295 of the Public Contract Code. Thus we may direct and limit
our analysis to the latter statute.
Prior to the establishment of the Public Contract Code, the provisions of its section
10295, quoted above, were essentially set forth in section 14780 of the Government Code. This
office rendered two opinions with regard to whether certain grants or contracts were governed by
that section. Our analysis was essentially the same in both opinions. Likewise we believe the
analysis in those opinions is equally applicable herein.
Thus in 58 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 586 (1975) we were asked whether grants by the Office
of Criminal Justice Planning ("OCJP") to local government and state and private agencies fell within
the purview of section 14780 of the Government Code. These grants were made for a "wide variety
of programs and projects generally relating to law enforcement and the prevention of crime." (Id,
at p. 587.) The grantees agreed to use the grants for proper purposes and to follow certain
accounting procedures, record keeping, and submit quarterly reports to OCJP. Upon these facts, we
concluded that only subdivision (b) of section 14780 was even potentially applicable (i.e., contracts
for services). As to subdivision (b), we stated:
"Subdivision (b) refers to contracts entered into by a state agency (OCJP) for
`services.' According to its common definition, the term `services' extends to any act
performed for the benefit of another under some arrangement or agreement whereby
such act was to have been performed. Skrivanich v. Davis, 186 P.2d 364, 370 (1947)
(Supreme Ct. Wash.,), rehearing den. 1947; Creameries of America v. Industrial
Commission, 102 P.2d 300, 304 (1940) (Supreme Ct. Utah).
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"Generally, the OCJP grant itself, gives funds to an entity to conduct a
described law enforcement project. This is not akin to the standard contractual
setting wherein a state agency contracts for the purpose of rendering services to or
receiving services from the other party to the agreement (i.e., maintenance contracts,
consultant contracts). Rather, we are aware of no criteria that the performance of the
project must be for the benefit of OCJP as a party to the grant award documents."
(Id. at p. 590.)
With respect to whether the quarterly reports could be considered to be "services" rendered to OCJP,
we stated:
"It would seem that these reports would be principally used by OCJP to audit
the grant project. . . . if they are used for evaluation studies, such would appear to be
a by-product of the main purpose of the grant documents, which is to provide funds
for the accomplishment of a specified project, a project which in general will not
entail the rendition of services to the grantor, OCJP." (Id. at 591.)
We thus concluded overall:
"Essentially, it is believed that the foregoing discussion relating to section
14780 and OCJP grants points out the distinction between `procurement' contracts
by the state, and `assistance' to others through grants. The former fall within the
purview of section 14780, and the latter do not. Accordingly, it is concluded that the
grant award documents used by OCJP in disbursing federal grant funds to entities as
grantees do not come within any of the four types of contracts described in
subdivisions (a) through (d) of Government Code section 14780. Therefore, the
requirement that such documents be approved by the Department of General Services
is not applicable to the grant award documents." (Ibid.)
In 63 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 290 (1980) we were presented with an analogous situation.
In that opinion we concluded that certain grants made by the California Department of Aging
pursuant to federal law did not fall within the scope of section 14780 of the Government Code, using
virtually the same reasoning as we did in our opinion on the OCJP. We additionally noted:
"The Department is authorized to (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 9308) and, in fact,
does receive federal money under the provisions of the federal act (45 C.F.R. § 74.1
et seq.). The Department is a conduit of these funds which it may grant to qualified
entities, individuals or groups. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 9314, 9412, 9503.) The
grants are made to further the purposes of the grantee, not the Department, subject
to the powers of the Department to provide administrative assistance relating to the
programs for which it funnels funds. The Department received no consideration
from the grantee pursuant to the grant documents." (Id., at p. 292; emphasis added.)
Accordingly, in both of our prior opinions, we concluded that if the purpose of the
grant or contract was to provide assistance to another entity in the performance of its services to
others and with no reciprocal return of goods or services benefiting the state, it did not fall within
the provisions of section 14780 of the Government Code. The same reasoning would apply to the
contracts and grants at issue herein with respect to student matriculation services and general
assistance to community college districts. The purpose of the funds here is to provide supplemental
assistance to the districts in the performances of their services to others, not for the return of goods
or services to the state itself. (See § 78216, subd. (a) ["The Legislature recognizes that community
college districts are currently funding various components of student matriculation through existing
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counseling, assessment, and other student services, but that adequate student matriculation cannot
be realized without supplemental funding support"].) Whatever planning, accounting, and
evaluation "services" would be rendered to the Board by the districts would not give rise to the
application of the Public Contract Code requirements. (See 58 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra, at 591.)
Based upon the reasoning of our prior opinions, we conclude that (1) the Board may
distribute funds to community college districts for student matriculation services without the
approval of the Department of General Services, and (2) the Board may distribute funds to
community college districts by grants for general assistance without the approval of the Department
of General Services.
* * * *
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