25% hike in UC fees approved for fall
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Deepa Bharath and Deirdre Newman
The University of California regents on Thursday slapped a 25% fee
increase on students, their second hike this year in the face of
drastic state budget cuts.
The board approved the increase for this fall on a 13-3 vote,
backing the UC Regents Finance Committee’s recommendation on
Wednesday to raise the fees by 25% while giving UC President Richard
Atkinson the authority to go 5% higher. In-state students will now
have to pay about $4,794 a year -- almost a $1,000 increase.
University officials anticipated that the regents would approve
the recommended increase, but don’t know yet if it will end up being
a 30% hike, said Brent Yunek, UC Irvine’s assistant vice chancellor
of student affairs.
“That’s not been adopted yet, and we won’t know for sure until the
state approves its final budget,” he said.
University of California officials expect cuts of at least $380
million to their state-funded budget of about $3 billion, and some
proposals in the Legislature would cut up to $400 million more.
UCI is “doing everything to help students in need,” Yunek said.
“We have a variety of grants to help out [poor] students,” he
said. “We even have partial aid available to middle class families
with income of up to $90,000.”
Yunek said the tight budget has not forced UCI to ax entire
programs, but several educational programs have suffered in one way
or another because of deep cuts in funding.
“There’s still a lot of uncertainty,” he said. “But we’re doing
everything we can to protect the integrity of our educational
experience.”
Students interviewed on campus Thursday said they are disappointed
by the fee increase.
Lin Hu, a chemical engineering sophomore, said he cannot afford
the increase.
“Hopefully, financial aid will kick in,” he said. “This is not
good. But it’s education, it’s very important, and you have to pay
for it.”
Rob Ross, a graduate English literature student, said the state
should increase taxes instead of school fees.
“We spend more on the prison system than the school system,” he
said.
The increases do not affect a few such as Jason Tenenbaum, a
graduate chemistry student who gets tuition reimbursement and a
monthly stipend from his advisor.
“But given the budget crisis, something needs to be done,” he
said.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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