Students unhappy with UC fee increases
- Share via
Jeff Benson
University of California regents voted Thursday to raise the minimum
annual cost of enrollment for UC students to more than $6,000,
beginning next year, a hike that riled local students.
The Board of Regents voted 13-1 in favor of an 8% increase in
undergraduate student educational fees, which cover the cost of
enrolling in a school, and a 10% increase in graduate student
educational fees. Both increases coincide with the governor’s Higher
Education Compact with the University of California and California
State University systems.
The compact was designed as a long-term resource plan for the
universities. In exchange for stability, universities will use the
additional fees to address future accountability goals for
enrollment, student fees, financial aid and program quality.
“Fee increases are, safe to say, never a good thing,” said UC
Regents spokeswoman Ravi Poorsina. “No one wants student fees to go
up. It’s unfortunate that we’re in the position where they’re
happening. In the moment, we’re trying to make things work and to
better our financial situation.”
Educational fees for resident undergraduates will be $435 higher
per academic year, while nonresident undergraduates’ fees will jump
$471. Regents increased undergraduate and graduate educational fees
last year by 14% and 20%.
Graduate students will pay 10% more, a boost of $606 for resident
graduate students and $628 for nonresident graduate students.
UC Irvine Vice Chancellor of student affairs Manuel N. Gomez
didn’t take kindly to the UC budget increases but said he understands
its necessity to help stabilize the state economy.
“Students will resist the fee increase as a matter of regularity,”
Gomez said. “I’m not happy, and I don’t know anyone in the university
who is happy with the fee increases. But it allows the university to
begin to slowly move toward recovering lost ground that occurred in
the state’s economic downturn.”
Sociology major and senior Antoinette Saenz of Costa Mesa said she
plans to enter a graduate program in social work after she graduates.
She said she’d feel better about the increases if she was shown, step
by step, how her money will be used.
“Personally, since I come from a minority background, and I’m
involved in advocacy for higher education, people are always asking
me, ‘How can I pay for this?’” Saenz said. “Then we have this fee
increase, and now we’re supposed to get our bachelor’s and be able to
pursue a master’s? A lot of people I know can’t come up with the
money.”
Another nonresident student, Shawn Augsburger, 22, of Irvine, said
he isn’t surprised by the budget hikes, because last year Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger promised the fee increase when the compact was
released.
Augsburger, a senior and history major planning to return to UC
Irvine for his teaching credential in the fall, thought the 10%
increase in graduate student education costs was too steep.
“To really solve this problem, we need a fee policy, where instead
of the regents voting every year, it should be more like private
universities, where the students pay a certain percentage of their
education each year,” Augsburger said. “The fees should go up
steadily to keep up the pace, so the students aren’t shot by this.
Students can change their habits to deal with a 3% increase. But all
of a sudden, they’re hit with 10%, and they can’t adjust.”
The regents also approved a 5% increase in the nonresident tuition
fee, beginning next year, which will raise the cost of nonresident
undergraduate tuition from $16,476 to $17,304. Nonresident tuition
will remain the same for graduate academic students and for
professional students.
Professional student fees increased least, an average of only 3%
higher. The UC Board of Regents attributed the rise to cost increases
in programs funded from professional-fee revenue.
* JEFF BENSON covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.