San Francisco Junior College The founding of a
junior college in San Francisco had long been the dream of Archibald Jeter Cloud, the Chief Deputy Superintendent of the
San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD). In response to
Black Tuesday and the ensuing
Great Depression, Cloud worked to convince the
San Francisco Board of Education of the necessity of a junior college in Depression-era San Francisco and of the District's financial ability to form one. Cloud's presentation of fiscal studies in 1934 convinced the Board of the availability of Federal and State funding for a junior college. City College of San Francisco was established by the Board of Education of the
San Francisco Unified School District on February 15, 1934, and officially opened on August 26, 1935, as
San Francisco Junior College (
SFJC). The college had no central campus at the time. Instruction began on September 4, 1935, with morning classes held at the
University of California Extension building on
Powell Street and afternoon classes held at
Galileo High School. The long distance between the two locations gave the college the nickname "Trolley Car College."
City College of San Francisco 's
Saint Francis of the Guns of 1968 sculpture in the foreground In February 1948, the name was changed to City College of San Francisco. It now consists of six campuses, the Ocean Campus being the primary one. In 1970, the college separated from the San Francisco Unified School District. The college continued to hold noncredit education programs throughout San Francisco's neighborhoods. However, as a result of CCSF's rapid growth, the San Francisco Community College District divided the programs between a division for credit courses at the Ocean Campus and one other division for noncredit courses throughout locations in San Francisco. The two educational divisions merged as a single division in 1990 with program locations held at campuses of City College of San Francisco.
Accreditation crisis In 2012, the college began experiencing significant public turmoil. On July 2, 2012, the
Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges (ACCJC), gave the college eight months to prove it should remain accredited and ordered it to "make preparations for closure". As summarized by the
San Francisco Chronicle in 2015, "the commission has never found wrongdoing or substandard instruction, but has said the college should lose accreditation because of tangled governance structures, poor fiscal controls and insufficient self-evaluation and reporting." In September 2012, the state chancellor's office warned that a special trustee would be appointed to oversee the institution's finances if the college did not voluntarily invite one; the board of trustees voted to invite a special trustee, despite student protests and objection. A report issued by California's Fiscal Crisis & Management Assistance team in September 2012 found the institution to be in a "perilous financial position" caused largely by "poor decisions and a lack of accountability. In July 2013, the ACCJC elected to take action to terminate the college's accreditation, subject to a one-year review and appeal period. The decision was based on a variety of deficiencies in standards. A Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team report was expected to be released by the end of July 2013. Nearly two months later, San Francisco city attorney
Dennis Herrera filed two legal challenges to stop the ACCJC from revoking City College of San Francisco's accreditation alleging conflicts of interest, a faulty evaluation process, and a politically motivated decision-making process. The 2013 decision to revoke accreditation in 2014 was put on hold pending the legal challenges. It operates with approximately $22M annual Stabilization funding from the California legislature which will expire in 2021. For the 2017/18 Fiscal year, the Board of Trustees approved a $49M Deficit budget.
Free City College After the accreditation crisis in 2012, CCSF was having low student enrollment issues. In the years that followed the crisis, student enrollment went from 90,000 students down to 60,000 students by 2017. In February 2017, the City of San Francisco began offering free tuition at CCSF for San Francisco city residents in a two year pilot program called "Free City College". The money for the free tuition was raised from Proposition W, a transfer of properties tax on property sold over $5 million.
Antisemitism In April 2026, an independent investigation at CCSF found that a union president's remarks towards
Abigail Bornstein, a Jewish computer networking professor, namely, calling her a “colonizer”, and mocking her last name, during a board meeting in 2025 and a follow up email the aggressor sent prof. Bornstein, constituted discriminatory harassment. While Bornstein stated that she felt unsafe returning to campus, the college leadership did not publicly condemn the remarks, and it's unknown whether the abuser suffered any disciplinary consequences following his actions. ==Organization and administration==