You can't apply to UC Santa Cruz if you have more than 90 units?

<p>When I did my UC application last week, it didn't allow me to apply to UC Santa Cruz because it said that the campus was closed for senior transfer students. I am transferring as a senior because i will complete around 110 units by the time I transfer. So I'm wondering if there is a way that I could apply to UC Santa Cruz as a senior, or is this a policy that is strictly enforced? It may be too late for me to apply right now, but maybe I could apply for Spring 2016.
I couldn't even apply to UC Santa Barbara or other UC's as a business or economics major because it said that the major was closed for senior transfer applicants. I only applied to UC Riverside because it was the only choice that was given to me on the application.</p>

<p>The may accept you but, will limit your transferable units:</p>

<p><a href=“University of California Counselors”>University of California Counselors;

<p>Essentially, they want people who receive degrees marked UCSC to have attended more than a handful of courses there.<br>
It’s kind like hopping in for the last mile of a marathon, having run the other miles on another day in another city. Though you’ve run the mileage, you haven’t completed the marathon and don’t deserve the medal.</p>

You can have 100 units or 200 units from a community college, and you’re still considered a “Junior Transfer”.
That’s what you should be applying as. You’re not a senior transfer.