UCI students shy away from tuition increases
Deirdre Newman
Many students who stuck around the campus during the first week of
winter break on Tuesday said they were not aware of the fee hikes
imposed by the University of California on Monday.
When they learned about the $135-per-quarter student fee increase
that will start in January, they greeted the news with the same
disdain as taking their finals.
“I feel like it kind of sucks for students who want an education
after high school,” said 21-year-old senior Jocelynn Garcia, who
works in the information booth at the school’s Student Center. “The
tuition is hard enough now for a lot of people.”
The UC Regents approved the increase in response to Gov. Gray
Davis’ proposal in early December to cut $74 million from the UC
System. The fee increase, in addition to other increases in fees for
certain professional students, will offset a $19-million unallocated
reduction included in the $74-million cut.
Manuel Gomez, vice chancellor of student affairs, said that while
raising fees is a painful measure, it is necessary to counteract the
drastic cuts from the state and to help students who rely on
financial aid.
“This increase is necessary to preserve the high quality of
education we provide,” Gomez said. “Because one third of this fee
increase will be returned to financial aid, we are trying to keep
students with financial need from being too heavily burdened.”
Many students, though, said they feel like they are already paying
a lot to attend UCI.
“I work two jobs already,” sophomore Brianna Adams, 19, said.
She said she would prefer that any fee increase go to the
lecturers, who went on strike earlier this fall.
“If they said they need more money for the [lecturers], that would
be OK,” Adams said. “We write out a lot of checks for the UC Regents,
so I wonder where that’s going.”
And foreign students, who already pay more than their California
peers, said it would be another financial challenge to deal with.
“It will be quite difficult for us because we’re already paying
more than $5,000 per quarter,” said Nitin Rekhi, 24, a graduate
student from India.
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