Originally posted by Rachel Tepper of Plight of the Pumpernickel for Sum of Change.
News of a steep hike in tuition fees at University of California public schools have students riled up at campuses across the UC system.
The UC’s Board of Regents met at UCLA on Wednesday to approve a plan which will raise next year’s undergraduate fees by an astounding 32%. UC President Mark Yudof told The New York Times that the fee increase was the university’s only choice in light of significant state budget cuts in the last decade. Yudof explained that the university system currently receives half as much, per student, as it did about twenty years ago.
Despite current measures in place which have slashed staff salaries, laid off teaching assistants, eliminated free printing for students and cut library hours, the board insisted that the university will be unable to maintain the same level of academic excellence without raising tuition.
Anger within the student body was most acutely felt at UCLA, where students from across the university system rallied outside the board’s meeting. Protests at times turned nasty, leading to the arrests of several students and accusations of police brutality.
Darlene Tran, a sophomore at UCLA, received bruises to her chest and wrist courtesy of officers responding to protests outside the meeting. Tran said she was chanting with a mass of students blocking the board members’ exit from a university building. She explained that she and others were demonstrating peacefully, but officers used unnecessary force when they pushed through the crowd to clear an exit path.
“From my perspective, I understand why they did it,” admitted Tran. “But I don’t think they needed to have been so aggressive. It was almost brutal, in a way.”
Tran noted that the Board of Regent’s meeting had originally been scheduled to take place on a day earlier on Thursday. She believes that the rescheduling was a deliberate attempt to thwart students’ plans to assemble. Students representing every institution in the UC system planned to bus to rallies at UCLA, but arrived a day late.
“We thought it was very sketchy,” said Tran.
In a last ditch attempt to convince the board to reverse its decision, some students stormed Campbell Hall, a building on UCLA’s campus, and occupied it from 2 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday in protest.
Tran noted that the protests had hit a particularly sensitive chord with students.
"We’re students, we can not handle this fee increase," said an exasperated Tran. She believes many students will be forced to drop out of school because of the increased fees. "We’re smart and we’re knowledgeable. We know there are other ways, there are other solutions, but we want to be protesting.”
Senior Sharya de Silva said the vigorous demonstration was a unique display of a particularly emotional student body.
“It was more students than I have seen in a long time. When it first started on campus, I would say at least 300 kids [were protesting],” explained Silva. “But then when we walked down Westwood Blvd…another group of students showed up. I think while marching we had around 600 kids.”
She described the scene outside Covel Hall, a building on UCLA’s campus, as “a mad house,” and said she believes about 1000 were protesting there.
Silva echoed sentiments of undue police force against what she described as passionate but nonviolent protest.
“I saw one officer swinging a baton around to try and clear room,” she said. “In the process he hit two guys and almost hit me. This one girl was actually trying to help the cops by calming the crowd down, and they got her. It was sad, she just hit the ground.”
Silva believes the police “didn’t know how to handle the volume of students with that much passion,” and their actions were preemptive measures taken in fear that protests would turn violent.
Despite the widespread discontentment in regard to increased fees and the fervor demonstrated by protesters, some students questioned the effectiveness of such displays.
“Everyone is unified in their opinion about it, well, sucking, but not everyone supports the protests,” said junior Nathan Stein. He said the demonstrations are “causing a lot of disturbance to people living in the dorms and not accomplishing much.”
Both Tran and Silva confessed that they believed the decision made by the Board of Regents will likely stick.
Protests have currently died down, though students continue to stew over the possible implications the increase.
For now though, students must turn their thoughts to another problem: finals. Exams for the fall semester will begin taking place in a matter of days. Little time, said Stein, to worry about tuition.
“I think most students are spending their time studying,” he said.



10 Comments







This is an attack on public education that has been going on for some time. The great public land grant universities (California; Wisconsin; Michigan; etc) are an excellent example of how government can do things well. All of them have been under attack since the days of Reagan and nothing has changed under Obama.
Obama underfunded relief to the states in his economic stimulus plan. Recall that top economists like Paul Krugman and Joe Stiglitz said this almost a year ago. The economic crisis has hit hard the states: they collect less in taxes so they have less money to pay out. The first thing cut: education. Obama and his administration knew/should have known this. But Obama tellingly has never attended a public school in his life. He went to posh schools like Punahou (Hawaii); Columbia; and Harvard Law school, likely with government supported affirmative action plans helping him to get in. He has no connection at all with public universities, public education and has shown himself an enemy of them. Look at the guy who he chose to be his education chief: Arne Duncan. An advocate of privatizing education.
Obama is the new, smiley face with better public relations but the same agenda as the last administration. It’s true in education, the economy, the escalation of the wars, and the bailouts to banks and Wall St.
You got that right.
The trick in more recent times, however, has been for states to nickel and dime students through manipulation of fees. Tuition doesn’t change much, but fees are upped on a regular basis.
The state of Maryland went even further and sent out thousands of letters to enrollees requesting additional (retroactive) payment of fees for past semesters they decided were owed to them right after they realized the gamble they’d taken on Wall Street with taxpayer monie had evaporated into the ether. It’s not easy to be sympathetic under such circumstances, notwithstanding, the cavalier approach to recovery taken by Obama and his handlers.
No such thing as a free lunch. And don’t ask me to start providing one.
Protestors who want simple change always back down in the face of overwhelming force.
Until people are pushed to the point where they won’t back down, the cops and the power structure they protect will always win.
My feeling: don’t join the protest unless and until you’re willing to lay it all on the line.
People that are non-violently exercising their Constitutional rights to Free Speech & the Right to Assemble SHOULD NOT have to deal with the threat of overwhelming force. You are definitely right that in many cases this is exactly what we are faced with. Since the Bush/Cheney coup “our police,”
“our civil servants” have adopted the same disregard & outright hostility to
the Constitution and civil liberties that was a hallmark of that criminal administration. In our city the police even changed their uniforms from tan to a dark navy blue color. This might sound trivial but it definitely signaled a huge change in their attitude. I would like to call on all our law enforcement people to re-dedicate themselves to the Constitution & the Rule of Law, regardless of what is done in Washington D.C.
Protests DO work. The 2 main reasons we’re not STILL in Vietnam are the overwhelming protests that took place on college campuses thruout this country, and the fact that we saw our children being maimed & killed on the Nightly News day after day. Another way you can tell that getting people out into the streets is VERY effective:the “powers that be” now try to find out who the leaders are as soon as possible and arrest them, often on trumped up charges that are later dropped to keep any organized protests from happening,
as well as the extent (unconstitutional or otherwise) that they are willing to
go to stop the perfectly legal expressions of people’s opinions.
I asserted the same thing on a thread a few months ago and was told that the idea the Vietnam war protests had anything to do with the actual withdrawal from that war was an “old hippie fantasy.”
OY!
California students pay among the lowest tuition in the country so they should be happy to pay a little more. On a percentage basis is sounds like a lot but it really is not for CA residents. They pay less than I paid back in the 1960′s.
The students today are just spoiled thanks to 40 years of permissive parenting.
Oh, I forgot to mention. The reason tuition is going up is because CA is broke. Money doesn’t grow on trees. This is a good leason for students to learn.
This is an under reported story. So thanks. I was trying to get a diary done on the difference in guests on Dylan Rattigan’s show and Amy Goodman’s on Tuesday. I like Dylan, but he pays too much attention to politicians. He had on some young insipid women named Crystal running for office as a Democrat. “Our generation believes in efficacy. Our parents believed in idealism…Our parents started out idealists and ended up cynical. We started out cynical and are becoming more hopeful.” Bleeeckkkkk! Urp! Barf bag please. She sure sounds like a politician though. Reminded my of Tracy Flick in the brilliant movie “Election”. It was very disheartening. New generation of politicians same as the old generation no matter what Crystal thinks.
So sadly I turned the channel and turned on Amy Goodman and one of the 43 students arrested and one of the leaders was a young woman not much younger than our Crystal. What did she talk about? Specifics, Crystal. Something we actually call efficacy.
Crystal would look sadly at this young woman and fault her for that awful idealist stuff like seeking social justice for her peers and for the unemployed. How naive. Doesn’t she know that she will never get near the seats of power that way, let alone get on the Morning Meeting.
But unidentified woman also passed the good looking test if that’s what it takes to get on MSNBC. So write to Dylan and see if he’ll have on a person who is seeking to change her world with a good heart and brave action.