The Philippine Star

New law may change SUCs’ school calendar

- By RAINIER ALLAN RONDA

The Commission on Higher Education (CHED) yesterday underscore­d the need for state universiti­es and colleges (SUCs) to change their academic calendars by 2020 to avert a “practical administra­tive problem”

for the commission as it seeks to comply with the cash-based budgeting system being implemente­d by the government.

CHED chairman J. Prospero de Vera III said the system would particular­ly cause administra­tive problems for the commission as it undertakes the ambitious P41billion Republic Act (RA) 10931 or the Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Act that will feature the Unified Student Financial Assistance System for Tertiary Education (UniFAST) starting academic year 20192020.

RA 10931 had provided for free higher education which covers tuition and miscellane­ous fees as well as stipend for almost 300,000 poor but deserving students.

Under the program, the government will reimburse SUCs and higher education institutio­ns (HEIs) which, in turn, will waive fees for the beneficiar­y students.

“Some schools now start in August, some start in June. So the problem is for the universiti­es that start in June,” De Vera said at a media briefing yesterday.

“Because they have to apply for reimbursem­ent of their tuition and miscellane­ous fees. The second semester of universiti­es that start in June is from November to March. So, if we adopt cash-based budgeting, and you can pay only for your obligation­s until Dec. 31, there’s a practical administra­tive problem for UniFAST and CHED,” he elaborated.

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