California State University tuition jumps 12%
Visitors stroll outside the Jean and Charles Schulz Information Center on the campus of Sonoma State University in Rohnert Park.
PD filePublished: Tuesday, July 12, 2011 at 6:32 p.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, July 12, 2011 at 6:32 p.m.
Anthony Gallino found out Tuesday that he will have to earn a paycheck this fall in addition to attending Sonoma State University.
Facts
How much California's state universities cost
Total fees at California State University campuses for 2010-2011. Basic tuition goes up 22 percent for the 2011-2012 school year.
California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, $6,780
Humboldt State University, $5,755
California State University, Chico, $5,620
Sonoma State University, $5,508
San Jose State University, $5,370
California State University, Bakersfield, $5,314
California State University, Stanislaus, $5,302
California Maritime Academy, Vallejo, $5,294
San Diego State University, $5,206
California State University, Sacramento, $5,194
California State University San Marcos, $5,124
California State University, East Bay, $5,091
California State University Channel Islands, $5,085
California State University, Northridge, $5,076
California State University, San Bernardino, $5,049
San Francisco State University, $5,014
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, $4,812
California State University, Fresno, $4,876
California State University, Fullerton, $4,866
California State University, Dominguez Hills, $4,849
California State University, Los Angeles, $4,847
California State University, Long Beach, $4,810
California State University, Monterey Bay, $4,721
“Last year, I didn't need a job,” said Gallino, who will be entering his second year at SSU. “This year, without question, I will need to have a job.”
That realization came after Tuesday's decision by California State University trustees to raise tuition by 12 percent at each of the system's 23 campuses.
That comes on top of a 10 percent tuition hike approved in November.
The result is that Gallino's basic tuition bill charged to all CSU students will rise by $1,030, from the $4,440 he paid in school year that just ended to $5,470 starting in the fall.
The latest increase, amounting to $588 a year, takes effect in the fall semester and bumps yearly CSU's basic tuition to $5,472, an amount that does not include campus fees or room and board.
The increase will prevent further cuts, said SSU President Ruben Armiñana, but many more students will need to “become more aware” of financial aid assistance and other, private scholarships.
CSU Chancellor Charles Reed said the 12 percent was forced by the state budget, which cut $650 million from CSU's funding.
“The enormous reduction to our state funding has left us with no other choice if we are to maintain quality and access to the CSU,” Reed said in a statement.
Also, the University of California Board of Regents is expected to raise tuition Thursday by nearly 10 percent, or more than $1,000 a year.
Students like Gallino, who in the spring led an unsuccessful fight against a new SSU fee to pay for a new student union, said higher tuition will limit access to the university system.
“We're talking about a public education here,” he said. “How public can it be when you are constantly raising fees and not everyone can pay for college?”
SSU is already the fourth-most expensive CSU school, behind Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Humboldt State and Fresno State.
Starting in the fall, SSU students also will pay $1,278 a year for health and other campus services. That includes a new $50 a semester fee for mental health services. That brings that year's total fees to $6,748.
The SSU fee schedule does not yet include the $300 a year new student union fee that Gallino opposed. That won't kick in until fall 2012.
Like student leaders around the state, SSU students said the latest tuition increases was a sign of misplaced priorities.
“I don't think that education is valued highly enough in our political system,” said Nicolas Carjuzaa, a sophomore and a student senator last year.
Carjuzaa, whose parents pay his tuition, said he personally won't be affected, but many students will. They may not leave SSU, he said, but the adjustments they make will impact their college careers.
“What's going to happen is that students will be able to afford it, but they'll be taking less than a full load, so they'll be staying for a fifth year,” he said.
Based on his experience of previous tuition hikes, the latest may well lower graduation rates, said mathematics professor and SSU faculty chairman Ben Ford.
“The biggest impact I see is students working more and students having to take time off, which means they often don't make it back,” Ford said.
“The longer you take to get through your college studies the less likely you are to graduate,” he said.
Gallino's mother, Lynn Bronzan of Visalia, said she was “very unhappy that it's come to this,” but the increase reflected a greater problem: The state's inability to control its spending and its subsequent debt.
“We're all paying for it,” she said.
Still, she said, there are other, not necessarily negative, real world lessons that may result.
“The fact that Anthony has to get a job to help pay for his schooling, I think it will help him become responsible,” Bronzan said.
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This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
CORRECTION: July 15, 2011
A story posted on July 12, 2011 incorrectly reported that starting in fall 2011, Sonoma State University students will pay $1,278 a semester in campus fees. They will pay that much a year.
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