UC proposes first tuition increase in six years for more faculty, courses and financial aid

The University of California unveiled a proposal Wednesday for the first tuition increase in six years, saying booming enrollment growth and reduced state support have left campuses scrambling to pay for more faculty, course offerings, classrooms and financial aid.

Under the proposal, tuition would grow to $11,502 for the 2017-18 school year — a 2.5% increase, or $282. The student services fee would increase to $1,128, a $54 increase. But financial aid would cover the increases for two-thirds of the university’s California resident students, who number about 175,500, said UC spokeswoman Dianne Klein.

Nonresident undergraduates would face a total increase of $1,668. They would pay the same increases in base tuition and student fees but also a 5% hike in their supplemental tuition, which would rise $1,332 —  from $26,682 currently to $28,014 next year.

“We’re at the point where if we don’t do this, if we don’t invest, the quality of education is going to suffer,” Klein said. “We want these students to have the same or better experience than students who came before them.”

The proposed increases will be presented to the UC Board of Regents this month. They have been opposed by many students, and protests briefly shut down the last regents meeting in November. Students have said that even with financial aid covering their tuition, they face hardships paying for food and rent in the high-cost areas where most campuses are located, such as Berkeley, Westwood, San Diego and Santa Barbara.

Ralph Washington Jr., the UC Student Assn. president, said many students want a rollback of the current tuition and fees, which have more than doubled since 2006 and are at their highest level in history. He said students understand the university system’s financial crunch but want a greater voice in how money is spent.

Klein said all of the increased revenue — which would total $88 million — would be used to benefit students. Many would receive more financial aid because one-third of money raised by any tuition increase goes directly into student awards, and assistance from the state-funded Cal Grant and Middle Class Scholarship programs also increases automatically.

A California resident student with an annual family income of $120,000, Klein said, would receive an estimated additional $700 in financial aid — more than twice the amount needed to cover the proposed $336 hike.

But many Californians support making at least some public colleges tuition-free — as New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo proposed this week. Cuomo announced a plan to make city and state colleges and universities free for students with family incomes of $125,000 or less.

A statewide survey last month by the Public Policy Institute of California found that nearly three-quarters of respondents — spanning all political parties, race, ethnicities, incomes and education levels — backed making community colleges tuition-free. An even greater share — 82% — supported more scholarships and grants for students. Higher taxes for higher education were supported by 68% of Democrats, 20% of Republicans and 42% of independents, according to the survey.

Assemblyman Jose Medina (D-Riverside), chairman of the Assembly’s higher education committee, said there were no plans yet to follow New York’s lead. But he said he would fight for more funding and was “moderately optimistic” about solutions other than tuition hikes.

Assemblyman Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) plans to hold a hearing in February on how to expand financial aid for needy college students to cover not only tuition but housing and other needs.

Even now, however, California provides some of the most generous financial aid in the nation. UC covers tuition for all students with family incomes of $80,000 and less. Of the 2.1 million California Community College students, 45% receive tuition waivers from the Board of Governors, while 61% of Cal State University undergraduates pay no tuition.

A scholarship program to assist middle-class families earning up to $156,000 annually will be fully phased in by the 2017-18 school year.

With the UC increases, campuses would be able to hire more faculty to lower class sizes, which have swelled in recent years following the largest boost in enrollment of California students since World War II. The student-faculty ratio at UC San Diego, for instance, grew to 27 to 1 over the last eight years — well above the historical ratio of 18 to 1. A tuition increase would help fund more tenure-track faculty throughout UC, including 27 more at UC San Diego, 34 more at UC Davis and more than 40 more at UC Irvine, Klein said.

She added that the tuition and fee increases also would help pay for more counselors, tutors, mental-health counselors, graduate-student fellowships and improvements to classroom spaces.

Washington argued, however, that not all students necessarily would benefit from the added services. If the new faculty hired were not sufficiently diverse, for instance, they would not improve the campus climate for marginalized students. He said he personally wanted to see more money spent on such needs as staff for sexual misconduct cases and support for hungry students.

Juniper Cordova-Goff, a third-year UC Berkeley student, said UC should lower executive pay rather than stick students with higher tuition. She said she receives enough financial aid to cover tuition and fees but that even with a full-time job, she still scrambles to cover the cost of housing, books and food — because she sends money to her parents, who are homeless.

But Audrey Dow of the Campaign for College Opportunity — a nonprofit that advocates expanding college access — called the tuition proposal reasonable given rising costs and the long tuition freeze and said, “UC has made a good commitment to cover the increase for low-income families.”

UC officials say that modest and predictable tuition increases could help families better plan their college expenses and give the university greater financial stability.

The state slashed nearly one-third of its support to UC after the 2008 recession — prompting the university to impose double-digit tuition increases — but has steadily restored the funding in the last six years in exchange for a tuition freeze and some academic and administrative reforms. 

Gov. Jerry Brown is among the elected officials who have said a modest increase next year would be reasonable after the six-year tuition freeze.

The proposal is sure to draw scrutiny from the regents. At the last meeting in November, Regent Eddie Island said UC should consider providing more aid to students to cover the full cost of attendance, and Regent Norman J. Pattiz said he had presided over many tuition hikes during his long years on the board but that using financial aid to justify another one “doesn’t fly anymore.”

Pattiz said Tuesday he remains undecided about his support. He said he wants answers to key questions first, such as what the alternatives to a tuition hike might be.

University of California students protest proposed tuition hikes outside a regents meeting in San Francisco. (Karl Mondon / Bay Area News Group)

UC seeks 1st tuition hike since 2011; protests expected

Tuition at the University of California is expected to grow for the first time since 2011 under a proposal the UC regents will consider this month, although state residents whose families earn less than $150,000 would escape the higher price.

Under the plan announced Wednesday, annual tuition for many California undergraduates would grow to $11,502 for the 2017-18 school year, an increase of $282, or 2.5 percent. The mandatory student services fee would grow to $1,128, an increase of $54.

Out-of-state students, including those from other countries, would see a 5 percent tuition hike, to $28,014 from $26,682. With other fee increases, the annual price for UC’s 35,000 nonresident undergraduates would rise to $28,350.

But in California, only resident undergraduates whose families earn more than $150,000 a year would pay the increase — about a third of the 175,447 in-state undergraduates, said UC spokeswoman Dianne Klein.

UC already waives tuition for California students whose families earn up to $80,000. Those from families earning $80,000 to $150,000 are eligible for state subsidies and would pay no tuition increase under the proposal, Klein said.
She said UC needs the revenue from the fee hikes to help plug a $70 million budget gap.

“We’ve been in a tuition desert for six years, and if we don’t invest in student services and faculty hiring, we’re in danger of deteriorating the quality of the university,” Klein said.

Under an agreement with Gov. Jerry Brown, UC froze tuition for five years starting in 2011. In return, UC receives 4 percent funding increases from Sacramento through 2019 and can raise annual tuition roughly by the rate of inflation starting this year.

The in-state tuition increase would raise $74 million for UC, a third of which would go to financial aid. The remaining $48 million would be used to hire more faculty and lower class sizes, and to expand the graduate program by hiring more teaching assistants, Klein said.

She said the student services fee hike would raise $14 million, a third of which would also go to financial aid. Half would be used to improve student mental health services.

The new revenue would not be used for faculty salary increases, Klein said.

UC is calling its tuition increase modest, especially compared with the double-digit increases of 2009 through 2011. But neither that nor the fact that lower-income students won’t have to pay the increase makes it acceptable to student representatives.

“Students oppose tuition increases when there remain pervasive issues on campus that are not being solved,” said Ralph Washington, president of the UC Student Association and a doctoral student of entomology at UC Davis.

Washington said most students not only want class sizes lowered, but they also want a say in who is hired to teach them.

“If students knew those increases would result in increasing the diversity of faculty, it would be easier to accept the increase in cost,” he said.

The regents will consider the proposal at their meeting in San Francisco on Jan. 25 and 26.


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