Whereas, by allowing CUNY to set its
own tuition levels, free from legislative oversight and public accountability,
making zero commitment to match any tuition increases with additional State
dollars, and providing no guarantee that ever-escalating tuition would not be
used to replace existing State support, the governor’s proposal essentially
takes the public out of public higher education; and
Whereas, under this formula, CUNY
could raise tuition up to ten percent this year, rather than the two percent
requested, and could go on raising tuition by a similar amount every year; and
Whereas, tuition increases at this
level, far from being “rational,” would place the University out of reach for
those who cannot afford the constantly rising tuition, and would jeopardize a
tradition of access to CUNY that spans three centuries and—
Whereas, differential tuition means
differential access—poorer students could be shut out of certain majors, thereby
exacerbating existing and persistent inequalities of race, gender and class;
and
Whereas, differential tuition also
poses a threat to a comprehensive liberal arts education and to student choice,
as it may force students to decide on a program based solely on cost, as it
could eliminate the opportunity for exploration of courses in multiple
departments, and as it could make changing one’s major logistically untenable;
and
Whereas, the proposal represents a
new, more insidious phase of the slow-motion privatization of CUNY that has been
occurring ever since free tuition was ended in 1975: the proposal would further
shift the cost of college onto the backs of individual students and their
families, making it a private rather than a publicly shared expense; and the
decisions about the cost increases would be removed from public accountability
and placed in the hands of a Board of Trustees that is unelected and not
accountable to the public; and
Whereas, other aspects of the Act
include further privatizing proposals, such as the provision—chiefly relevant to
SUNY—that provides for the selling off of public land owned by the universities
for private, for-profit enterprises; and
Whereas, the “Public Higher Education
Empowerment and Innovation Act” fundamentally misunderstands the nature of
public higher education: it is a public good, not a private commodity; its
benefit is to the whole society, not just to the individual; therefore be it
Resolved, that while the PSC believes
that some minor elements of the governor’s proposal—such as economies of
purchasing—may be beneficial for the public universities, the Public Higher
Education Empowerment and Innovation Act is, essentially—and dangerously—an
attempt to privatize public higher education; and be it further
Resolved, that the PSC call on the
New York State Legislature to reject the governor’s proposed budget cuts for
CUNY, to support the PSC’s proposal to the Legislature to make a modest start
this year on restoration of funds cut in the past two years, to reject the
central, privatizing structure of the Public Higher Education Empowerment and
Innovation Act, and to accept instead the PSC’s proposal to start now on a
long-term strategy for rational investment by the State in its public
university systems.
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PSC CAMPAIGN
FOR "RATIONAL
INVESTMENT" IN
CUNY.
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