The Trump administration is suing California, asking the state to end its policies allowing students without legal status to access in-state tuition and financial aid. But the administration’s legal argument is weak, according to top legal experts.
Author Archives: Adam Echelman, CalMatters
Adam Echelman covers higher education for CalMatters, focusing on California’s 116 community colleges and how they influence the state’s future. He works in partnership with Open Campus, a nonprofit newsroom focused on strengthening higher education coverage in local communities.
In his reporting, students drive every story. He’s traveled across the state, from Mojave to the upper north, examining why colleges rely on incarcerated students and later, why rural LGBTQ students don’t feel safe on campuses. In another article, he reported how older adults are deprived of thousands of dollars of financial aid. He’s also looked at issues facing the community college system, such as the rising cost of housing and the use of AI. He was an Education Writers Association fellow, which culminated in a two-part series about a novel education technique, known as competency-based education.
Before joining CalMatters, he worked as an equity reporter at the Modesto Bee, where his coverage of environmental injustice received a California News Publishers Association award.
Adam has extensive experience as an education leader. For three years, he served as the executive director of Libraries Without Borders, a nonprofit organization that helps expand access to information. Under his tenure, he built partnerships with federal and state education departments, as well as the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and private groups including the Knight, Ford and Open Society foundations.
He’s a graduate of Yale University and is fluent in Spanish and French.
Half a million young Californians aren’t in school or work. Most are men
Thousands of men in California are neither working nor in school. Gov. Gavin Newsom has called it a “crisis,” both for the labor market and for men’s mental health.
How much education does a California police officer need? What a new bill proposes
Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin, D-Thousand Oaks, proposes a new bill to establish higher education standards for new police officers.
Fraud in California community colleges triggers call for Trump investigation
Following CalMatters reporting, California’s Republican representatives are calling for the U.S. Department of Education and Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate how California’s community colleges are handling financial aid fraud.
Same-sex marriage gains constitutional protections as California voters approve Prop. 3
California voters passed Proposition 3, which enshrines the right to marry into the state’s constitution. While same-sex marriage is already legal, Prop. 3 ensures that LGBTQ+ couples can continue to marry even if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns landmark cases.
