| Benson: Tuition increases will help preserve CU's  quality, competitive edgeIn 8-1 decision this week, CU regents vote to raise tuition rates for 2010-11 No one — from University of Colorado officials to students and families — likes  the idea of tuition increases. But with CU faculty and staff continuing to work  to deliver the highest-quality education possible to students, officials are  pointing to the long-term value of a college degree. "Raising  tuition is never an easy decision. We know how difficult it can be for families  to pay for college," said CU President Bruce D. Benson earlier this week.  "These tuition increases will help us continue to deliver high quality  classroom instruction and student services, while striving to keep our  commitment as a public university to remain accessible to all Colorado  students." In  an 8-1 vote Monday, the CU Board of Regents decided to raise resident  undergraduate tuition by up to 9 percent, and nonresident undergraduate tuition  by up to 5 percent on all four of the university's campuses. The vote followed  a difficult discussion by the nine-member board of elected officials, who came  to a majority decision despite deep political divisions. The lone dissenter was  Regent Tom Lucero, R-Loveland. The  decision will mean that tuition rates for the average in-state College of Arts  and Sciences undergraduate student will go up by about $572 (9 percent) at  CU-Boulder for a total of $7,018 per year; by $504 (9 percent) at UC Denver for  a total of $6,216 per year; and by $420 (7.2 percent) at UCCS for a total of  $6,270 per year. Nonresident  undergraduate students in the College of Arts and Sciences will pay an extra  $1,300 (5 percent) for a total of $28,000 per year at CU-Boulder; $384 (2  percent) for a total of $19,128 per year at UC Denver; and $320 (2 percent) for  a total of $15,920 per year at UCCS. When  other costs such as room and board, mandatory fees and textbooks are taken into  consideration, the net increase in cost of attendance is only 4 percent at  CU-Boulder, 4.5 percent at UC Denver and 3.5 percent at UCCS. The  regents cited the state's deep funding cuts to higher education, rising costs  and an ongoing national recession as the primary reasons for the tuition  increases. Their decision, made during a special meeting on the UC Denver  campus in downtown Denver,  followed a grim budget presentation by CU Chief Financial Officer Kelly Fox. According  to Fox, CU faces another $50 million budget shortfall in fiscal year 2011-12,  and the university will continue with a three-prong budget reduction plan that  includes work force reductions, greater administrative efficiencies and the  search for new revenue. Since last July, Colorado  has cut higher education spending by nearly 60 percent, which translates into a  decrease of some $2,600 per resident student funding by the state. Fox  noted that CU is being helped by federal stimulus funding that will run out in  2011. Only 3.3 percent of the university's total operating budget currently  stems from taxpayer-supported state funding, and tuition is one of the few  revenue sources left for public universities still reeling from the effects of  the national recession. Even so, this week's tuition increases are expected to  make up only 20 percent of recent state funding cuts, Fox told the regents. Benson  said tuition increases are made only when higher education institutions  conclude they have few alternatives. He said this year's tuition increases  would help preserve the high quality of academic programs and student services  on all four CU campuses, and contribute to student financial aid. Despite the  increases, CU remains a considerable value for residents and nonresidents  alike, as the university's tuition rates are lower or on par with peer  universities in Arizona, California,  Michigan and Texas, which receive much greater state  support, he said. "CU  is a low-state-funding, low-tuition university, which is rare among national  public universities," he said. Benson,  who graduated from CU in 1964 with a geology degree and went on to found his  own company, added, "In the end, it's important for students and their families  to remember that a college education is, perhaps, the greatest investment they  can make in a young person's life. Higher education is a long-term investment  that pays high dividends over the life of an individual, and the innovation,  technology, start-up companies, jobs and expertise that emerge from our  campuses are important economic drivers for the state of Colorado." Before  deciding to cast a reluctant vote to raise tuition rates at CU, Regent Michael  Carrigan, D-Denver, condemned what he called Colorado's "chronic failure to invest in  higher education," and apologized to families who will have to pay higher  tuition rates. "To  our students and their families, we have to ask you to share the burden and  share the pain of the state's cuts, and we ask you to join us in the fight, to  the state's leaders, to demand that they fully invest in our colleges and  universities."     |