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CSU Board approves five-year annual 6% tuition hikes

by The AV Times Staff • September 13, 2023 5 Comments

Tuition for California State University students will increase by 6% annually for five years beginning in 2024-25 under a plan approved Wednesday, Sept. 13, by the university’s Board of Trustees.

Under the schedule, the annual undergraduate tuition for CSU will increase from the current $5,742 to $6,084 in the 2024-25 school year. The total would jump to $6,450 the following year, then to $6,840 in 2026-27, then to $7,248 and ultimately to $7,682 in 2028-29.

“State general fund and student tuition revenue are the two primary sources that support the university’s annual operating budget plan and the educational endeavors of approximately 460,000 CSU students,” according to a staff report outlining the proposed tuition increase. “To support the expenditure priorities of the budget plan, it would require a significant infusion of new, ongoing revenue from the state general fund and from a tuition increase. But the amounts of new revenue forecasted (state general fund) and proposed (tuition), will not be sufficient to fully support the new expenditures included in this plan.”

According to the staff report, the tuition increase would generate an additional $148 million in the 2024-25 academic year. The CSU was initially considering implementing an ongoing 6% tuition hike, but opted to limit the proposal to five years after vocal opposition from students and some members of the Board of Trustees who said it would create significant financial hardship for students amid the rising cost of living and housing.

During a Wednesday morning meeting of the Trustees’ Finance Committee, the panel rejected a motion to reduce the schedule to only three years of increases. During the meeting of the full Board of Trustees, another motion was made to impose only four years of increases, but the board also rejected that change. Interim CSU Chancellor Jolene Koester strongly opposed any reduction in the length of the tuition increases, saying it would be a major financial hit to the university system.

University officials said revenue increases are needed to cover a roughly $1.5 billion budget shortfall. CSU officials said the university has already implemented steep cost-cutting measures, but without additional revenue, it could be forced to cut course offerings or other services. The university also noted that more than half of CSU students have either part or all of their tuition covered by grants or scholarships. Trustee Jack McGrory said raising student costs is a difficult decision, but he noted that 60% of the CSU system’s funding is state money while the other 40% is from student tuition.

“We’ve had only one increase in tuition in 12 years,” McGrory said. “That’s not a business model that’s going to work long-term. It’s not sustainable.

“I know it’s tough to do this, we don’t like it. … But we’ve got to make the numbers work. And we’ve got to do something long-term that makes sense and continues the quality of education we have on these 23 campuses,” he added.

Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis spoke against the tuition hike, saying the CSU has not fully analyzed what the consequences will be among its student body. She suggested that anecdotal evidence suggests that many students may drop out of school, while others may take longer to graduate. She urged the board to delay the hike until more studies can be done on its impact.

The tuition hike does require the CSU to perform an assessment of the impacts of the increase on students, which will factor into the decision of whether to continue the tuition hikes beyond the five years in the current package.

Steve Relyea, CSU chief financial officer, told the trustees’ Finance Committee Wednesday morning that an “absence of tuition increases in 11 of the last 12 years has prevented CSU (from having) sufficient resources to keep up with rising costs.” He conceded there will be a financial impact on some students, but noted that CSU leaders met with student groups and agreed to meet some of their concerns — by including in the university’s tuition policy a guaranteed increase in funding for tuition support, the establishment of a standing financial aid advisory committee and the inclusion of students in tuition assessment that will be conducted after the hikes are implemented.

Ryan Storm, CSU assistant vice chancellor for budget, said that in the first year of the tuition hike, CSU will increase financial aid funding by $49 million, and it will increase by $280 million over the five years of tuition hikes.

The California Faculty Association union called the proposed tuition hike a “shocking and unconscionable” measure that would bump student costs by 34% over the five-year period.

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Filed Under: Education, Home

5 comments for "CSU Board approves five-year annual 65 tuition hikes"

  1. iconoclast says

    September 15, 2023 at 6:53 pm

    Whoa, wait. Don’t knock CSU. AV College is going to pay Angela Davis, the 1960s activist, to speak on campus for 45 minutes. The cost: $50,000. Want complain about something, say something about this.

    Reply
  2. ColdHardTruth says

    September 14, 2023 at 10:57 am

    We live in a litigious society where pondscum lawyers are constantly looking to sue every agency and organization for any little thing. Americans love to sue anyone and everyone they can and so many lawyers are willing accomplices.

    When you live in a society like this, it requires more personnel to mitigate and manage compliance issues to prevent lawsuits. Administrative departments become bloated and bureaucratic and more funding is needed to run them, as well as the need to hire their own legal staff as well.

    Who pays? Ultimately, the students and society, in general.

    Reply
    • William says

      September 14, 2023 at 2:28 pm

      Some of those pondscum lawyers end up as politicians and doing even more damage than just suing cities, school districts and agencies. They must rake in big bucks because they advertise like crazy. The last person I would trust to run for office is one of those leeches.

      Reply
  3. Tony says

    September 14, 2023 at 10:20 am

    It would be interesting to know how many students, including those who are undocumented, receive free tuition; if this is a large number then I think it would be fair to say that these tuition increases disproportionately impact those students who are required pay for their education. Is that fair to those students?

    Reply
    • Frank Rizzo says

      September 15, 2023 at 5:45 am

      Not fair at all.

      Reply

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