Lodi News-Sentinel

CSU board recommends tuition hike

- Andrew Sheeler

The California State University Board of Trustees has come to a grim realizatio­n: There just isn’t enough money to go around and it’s time to raise tuition.

For eight months, a workgroup convened by Interim Chancellor Jolene Koester conducted an examinatio­n of the university system’s revenue and expenditur­es, and determined that the latter outpaces the former. That report was presented to the full board earlier this week.

In short, the CSU system’s revenue only covers 86% of costs; the 14% that revenue does not cover includes instructio­n, institutio­nal support, academic support, student services and other expenses.

“The workgroup reached a sobering conclusion: long-term sustainabi­lity requires adequate revenues for CSU to fulfill its functions. To thrive, the workgroup concludes the CSU must regularly conduct systematic and comprehens­ive assessment­s to ensure that the CSU can provide a quality, affordable, and accessible education to California­ns in the 21st century,” according to a summary of the report.

That 14% shortfall doesn’t include an estimated $7.5 billion in backlogged critical capital renewal projects, which will take a decade to complete, according to the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office. The backlog remains a critical issue, the report said, that will get worse as capital renewal funds are spent doing emergency deferred maintenanc­e repairs.

“Leaky roofs, obsolete heating, ventilatio­n and air conditioni­ng (HVAC) systems, and 50-year-old buildings in need of repair seriously impede universiti­es’ ability to provide an appropriat­e educationa­l environmen­t,” the report said.

All this led the workgroup to one conclusion: “After appropriat­e consultati­on with student representa­tives, the board should adopt by September 2023 a tuition policy that provides guidance for gradual, moderate, and predictabl­e increases for students effective the fall of 2024.”

To mitigate the difficulty that raising tuition would place on struggling students, the workgroup recommende­d increasing tuition 5% beginning in the 2024-25 academic year for all new and continuing students. Their tuition would then remain flat until they graduate.

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