February 9, 2010 | Volume 43 Issue 13

Yudof’s New Plan For UC

PROJECT: Yudof makes announcement describing his new plan to raise money for student support.

Yudof Defends the Budget Cuts

REGENTS: The New University interviews UC President Mark Yudof about the fee increase and budget.

A Protest a Day Keeps the Doctor Away

Janitorial workers continue to protest the budget cuts outside of Aldrich Hall on Friday, Oct. 2. As bongo drums roll, they chant and hold picket signs in hopes of gaining better health care.

Humanities Out There Struggling

OUTREACH: Grant shortfall leaves popular outreach with less money and doubts for next year’s program.

Public Buses to UCI On Chopping Block

Hearing: Public assembly discusses OCTA proposed service cuts due to reduction of state funding.

UC Regents Approve Increase in Student Fees

Vote: Board of Regents approves 9.3 percent increase in fees to cover $450 million budget shortfall.

UC Salaries Come at the Expense of Students

It’s more bad news for University of California students, as UC officials have agreed to a 9.3 percent hike in student fees for the 2009-10 academic year. According to The Los Angeles Times, this would amount to a $662 increase per student and will bring the average basic cost for an undergraduate UC education to $8,720 a year for California residents, not including room, board and books. This increase has been enacted in order to help cope with the $450 million UC budget shortfall that is projected for the next two years.

Terminator: Budget Reform Edition

It includes a $12.5 billion increase in taxes, a $14.8 billion cut to education, public transportation, health care and the judiciary system and $5.4 billion in new borrowing. It offers less child credit and higher tuition to the tune of 9 percent. The 2009-10 California state budget has something for everyone, though not in a way that most Californians, Republican or Democrat, will like.

Construction Interrupted When Budget Pipeline Dries Up

While the poor state of our current economy is obvious, the extent to which it has further exacerbated California’s budget crisis is becoming all the more apparent. Last month, the California Pooled Money Investment Board, a committee that manages state spending, voted to stop spending on the construction of public works. This will delay projects authorized by voters and supported by Gov. Schwarzenegger in 2006.

UCSA Asks the California Supreme Court to Stop Budget Cuts

The University of California Student Association, along with individual students and several grassroots organizations including Californians for Justi

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Designed by Thomas Baker, Angel Ho, and Scott Roeder