Learning Stories
by
Mario deSantis
mariodesantis@hotmail.com
“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear,
free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to
oppose what I believe wrong, and free to choose those who shall govern my
country.” - -The Rt. Hon. John Diefenbaker, Canadian Bill of Rights,
1960
“The whole judicial system is at issue, it's
worth more than one person.”--Serge Kujawa, Saskatchewan Crown
Prosecutor, 1991
“The system is not more worth than one person's
rights.”--Mario deSantis, 2002
Ensign Stories © Mario deSantis and Ensign
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Students pan tuition hike |
By Janet French
of The StarPhoenix,
November 23, 2004
The University of Saskatchewan is predicting a four per cent increase in tuition
next year despite student groups’ calls for a tuition freeze last week.
"A four per cent tuition fee increase doesn’t sound like a lot but depending
on which program you’re in, it could be a couple hundred dollars," said Nicole
Berard, chair of the Saskatchewan branch of the Canadian Federation of Students and
a PhD student in English. Empty-pocketed students could be flocking to an on-campus
food bank and fishing more clothes out of a free clothing bin, she said.
In its annual operations forecast, the university predicts provincial funding will
increase by 2.5 per cent next year. The institution is asking for an additional 2.5
per cent funding increase to cover the cost of new buildings and maintenance.
The growing financial burden on students continues the trend of what the university
forecast calls "the continued apparent transfer of post-secondary education
from a public service to a private good."
Since 1995, government funding has decreased to 58 per cent from 67 per cent of the
university’s budget while tuition has gone from covering 22 per cent to 30 per cent
of the university’s costs.
Tuition rising out of synch with government grants is a sign Canadians are moving
to a United States-style postsecondary system, said John Conway, a researcher with
the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives – Saskatchewan.
Canadians need to have a debate about who should pay for university in a time where
degrees are a prerequisite for a job, he said. Conway authored a report released
last week saying students here pay the third-highest fees in the country and recommended
tuition in Saskatchewan be frozen for two years.
"I don’t think it’s fair to those students who can’t afford it," Conway
said. "And those students who can’t afford it, there are large numbers of them
in this province. We’ve turned into a ‘have’ province, but it turns out all the
family and individual income numbers are way down. The people of this place are not
rich."
The forecast indicates the university has planned $6.2 million in cuts to the colleges
of agriculture, commerce, nursing, pharmacy, nutrition, the division of extension
and facilities management to avoid a deficit.
"The financial measures we have taken this year will have a substantial impact
on access by students to the broad array of programs offered by the university, increasing
the likelihood that potential students will leave the province to study in selected
disciplines," the forecast said. The budget committee also predicts fees for
professional programs like law, medicine, pharmacy and commerce should brace for
"single-digit" or "double-digit" increases in the future.
Paying more tuition for less access to programs isn’t fair, Berard said.
Tuition fees at the U of S are based on the average tuition charged at medical and
doctoral universities across the country, Tony Whitworth, university vicepresident
of finance and resources, said. The university has to hit students up for cash to
attract the best and brightest professors to teach them, he said.
"We want to balance out reasonable fees with the best quality of educational
experience," Whitworth said. "What’s happened when other provinces have
had a freeze or a cap on tuition is that the quality of programs suffer and that
at the end of the freeze period, some very significant catch-up increases take place."
Although student fees are increasing faster than government funding, the university
is asking the provincial government for more, he said.
Government coffers aren’t bottomless, Learning Minister Andrew Thomson said, and
universities will have to look elsewhere for funds if they’re spending more than
taxpayers are willing to contribute.
It’s a misconception government funding to universities is decreasing, he said. In
the last decade, Saskatchewan’s funding per university student increased more than
any other province in Canada, he said. Last year, Saskatchewan Learning increased
funding to universities by two per cent – the second-highest budget increase next
to health care, he said.
He also refuted the notion higher tuition is keeping lower- and middle-income students
out of university.
"There are more students in university today than at any point in our history
and more students from different socio-economic classes than ever," he said.
"It’s hard to argue that accessibility is restricted when more students are
attending than ever before."
Conway said the university needs to shift its focus from landing research dollars
and new buildings back onto students. "That’s what it wants most. That’s what
it has lobbied for hardest," he said. "It certainly hasn’t been as effective
in lobbying for operating funds, which benefit students directly."
The tuition hike isn’t yet set in stone. The university’s budget for the 2005-2006
school year will be amended once the provincial government releases their budget,
and ultimately their decisions on post-secondary funding, next March. |
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