| Back FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE REGENTS APPROVE 2007-08 BUDGET PROPOSAL The University of California Board of Regents today (Nov. 16) approved a 2007-08 budget proposal that includes new funding for student enrollment growth at both the undergraduate and graduate levels, expansion of research in fields critical to California’s competitiveness, restoration of prior cuts to the instructional program, and salary increases for faculty and staff. “This is a budget that continues to provide access to the University of California for all eligible students and also makes strategic investments to strengthen our contribution to the state’s economy, health, and quality of life,” said UC President Robert C. Dynes. “Universities need to be in the business not just of research and development, but research, development, and delivery that translates knowledge into societal benefit. This budget invests in efforts to continue expanding the University’s ability to deliver new contributions to the people of California.” The budget includes no action on student fees for 2007-08. The state provided a “buyout” of student fees in 2006-07, and it is not yet known whether the state will have sufficient resources to do so again next year. As a result, the Regents will withhold action on student fees until after the governor’s state budget proposal is issued in January. Under the University’s budget plan, UC’s state-funded budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2007, would total $3.324 billion, an increase of $247.9 million or 8.1 percent above the 2006-07 level. State funding and student fees pay for the core educational program at UC; however, the University’s total budget from all sources for all activities, excluding the UC-managed national laboratories, is expected to be $17 billion in 2007-08. The Regents’ budget plan serves as a budget request to the state. Regents at their meeting indicated they will continue reviewing the University’s budget priorities in the coming months. Highlights of the budget The budget plan is based on the University’s “compact” with the governor, an agreement that outlines state funding expectations and UC accountability expectations over a multi-year period. Below are highlights of the 2007-08 budget plan. These items would be funded both from state resources and from other revenue to the University, including student fee revenue:
Fees and financial aid The budget does not include a proposal for student fees. The Regents will await the governor’s January state budget proposal before taking action on student fees; the budget as adopted by the Regents assumes $71 million in funding from either student fee income or state revenue. Currently, mandatory systemwide fees are $6,141 for resident undergraduates and $6,897 for resident graduate academic students. With the inclusion of campus-based miscellaneous fees, the total annual fee average is $6,852 for resident undergraduates and $8,938 for resident graduate academic students. If a fee increase occurred in 2007-08, it would be the University’s intention to provide for 33 percent of the undergraduate fee income to be returned to financial aid, with special emphasis on providing assistance to needy middle-income students who traditionally have not qualified for grant aid. There would be a 45 percent return-to-aid for graduate academic students, recognizing the need to provide competitive graduate support and to cover collective bargaining agreements for teaching assistants; and a 33 percent return-to-aid for professional school students. The budget does include a 5 percent ($900) increase in nonresident tuition for undergraduates only. Nonresident tuition would be frozen for graduate academic students for the third year in a row, as part of the University’s effort to remain attractive to the most talented graduate students from across the nation and around the world. Currently in 2006-07, with the inclusion of mandatory systemwide fees that nonresidents must also pay, the average total nonresident student charges are $25,536 for undergraduates and $23,899 for graduate academic students. Capital budget The Regents also approved a 2007-08 budget for state capital improvements, including projects to improve the earthquake safety of UC buildings, construct new facilities to accommodate student enrollment growth, renew outdated infrastructure, and expand the PRograms in Medical Education (PRIME) being developed on several campuses to improve the delivery of health care to underserved Californians, including through the expansion of telemedicine. The capital budget includes $317 million for general capital outlay and $140 million for projects associated with expansion of the medical school programs, both from general obligation bonds approved by the voters in Proposition 1D, along with $30 million in state lease revenue bonds for the Helios project at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. # # # Note: The budget presentation made to the Regents is available at www.universityofcalifornia.edu/regents/regmeet/nov06/502.pdf.
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