Current:Home > FinanceFacing $1.5B deficit, California State University to hike tuition 6% annually for next 5 years -InvestPioneer
Facing $1.5B deficit, California State University to hike tuition 6% annually for next 5 years
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-08 06:25:54
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Trustees at California State University, the nation’s largest public university system, voted Wednesday to raise student tuition by 6% each year for five consecutive years to try to narrow a $1.5 billion deficit, a decision that some students called “disheartening.”
The university’s governing board voted 9-0 to approve the increases that will start across the 23-campus system in the fall of 2024. Annual tuition for full-time California undergraduate students will increase by $342 next year to $6,084. By the 2028-2029 school year, those students will be paying $7,682.
The tuition hikes are needed to provide support to students, both through financial aid and programs to help them succeed academically, university officials say. The extra revenue is also needed to give more resources to faculty and staff and maintain school facilities, according to a report about the system’s finances released in May.
The report found the system with 460,000 students, many of them minorities and first-generation college students, has enough revenue to cover about 86% of what it actually costs to meet student, staff, and institution needs, leaving it with a $1.5 billion gap.
“We are at a crossroads and if we don’t do it now... it’s going to get more and more difficult,” said Julia Lopez, a CSU trustee and the co-chairperson of the working group that wrote this report.
Angelie Taylor, a junior at Cal State Channel Islands in Camarillo, California, said an increase in tuition will likely derail her because she is already working three part-time jobs to pay for tuition and cover housing and other expenses.
Taylor, who is a student organizer at Students for Quality Education, a progressive grassroots organization, said she doesn’t qualify for financial aid because of her GPA, which she said is low because of all the jobs she is working to make ends meet.
She said that taking a fourth job would leave her no time to study and she would have to drop out. She attended a meeting with the CSU Board of Trustees on Tuesday to explain her situation.
“It’s so disheartening to see that the board of trustees did not listen to the hundreds of us that came out yesterday,” Taylor said. “To have them completely ignore what we said and not do their job fully to secure the proper finances we need for this issue is such a big disrespect.”
Officials said tuition has only been increased once in the last 12 years — a 5%, or $270. Meanwhile, inflation grew by 39%. The university receives 60% of its funding from the state government, and the rest comes from tuition.
The five years of the tuition increase will generate a total of $860 million in revenue. Of those funds, $280 million will be committed to financial aid, school officials said.
Steven Relyea, the university system’s chief financial officer, told trustees the tuition increase will help narrow the deficit gap but it won’t close it.
The tuition hikes won’t affect about 276,000 undergraduates who have their tuition fully covered by financial aid because of their family’s low income. Several trustees said they worry about the other 40% of the undergraduates, or about 184,000 students, who don’t qualify for financial aid and who will face increased tuition. But they agreed they saw no other alternatives to stabilize the system’s finances.
“We cannot survive unless we take action. No one wants to do this but it is our responsibility,” said Jean Picker Firstenberg, a CSU trustee.
veryGood! (9317)
Related
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Even remote corners of Africa are feeling the costly impacts of war in Ukraine
- George Santos files appeal to keep names of those who helped post $500,000 bond sealed
- Aileen Cannon, Trump-appointed judge, assigned initially to oversee documents case
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Summers Are Getting Hotter Faster, Especially in North America’s Farm Belt
- Margot Robbie and Husband Tom Ackerley Step Out for Rare Date Night at Chanel Cruise Show
- Obama’s Climate Leaders Launch New Harvard Center on Health and Climate
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Pruitt’s Anti-Climate Agenda Is Facing New Challenge From Science Advisers
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Michelle Yeoh Didn't Recognize Co-Star Pete Davidson and We Simply Can't Relate
- UN Climate Summit: Small Countries Step Up While Major Emitters Are Silent, and a Teen Takes World Leaders to Task
- InsideClimate News to Host 2019 Investigative Journalism Fellow
- Sam Taylor
- Fly-Fishing on Montana’s Big Hole River, Signs of Climate Change Are All Around
- Dangerous Contaminants Found in Creek Near Gas Wastewater Disposal Site
- The rate of alcohol-related deaths in the U.S. rose 30% in the first year of COVID
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
Hoda Kotb Recalls Moving Moment With Daughter Hope's Nurse Amid Recent Hospitalization
How climate change is raising the cost of food
Antarctica Ice Loss Tripled in 5 Years, and That’s Raising Sea Level Risks
Bodycam footage shows high
Harry Potter's Miriam Margolyes Hospitalized With Chest Infection
How Abortion Bans—Even With Medical Emergency Exemptions—Impact Healthcare
What Donald Trump's latest indictment means for him — and for 2024