FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, Aug. 24, 2007
Brad Hayward (510) 987-9195
brad.hayward@ucop.edu
GOVERNOR SIGNS 2007-08 BUDGET
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger today (Aug. 24) signed a 2007-08 state budget
that includes funding for student enrollments, faculty and staff compensation,
academic preparation programs, and key research initiatives at the University
of California.
“We greatly appreciate the support the governor and Legislature
have provided in this budget for the teaching, research, and public
service missions of the University of California,” said UC President
Robert C. Dynes. “In a challenging budget year, our state’s
elected leaders have made an important decision to continue investing
in the promise and impact of public higher education.
“This budget includes funding to provide a place at the university
for eligible students who have worked hard to get here, helps us address
faculty and staff compensation levels that still trail the market, and
continues to support college preparation programs for educationally
disadvantaged students in our public schools. It also invests in university
research that will support our planet’s sustainability and keep
California on the leading edge of green-technology development.”
Under the final spending plan, UC’s state-funded budget for the
fiscal year that began July 1 will total $3.27 billion, an increase
of $196 million or 6.4 percent over the prior year.
The governor vetoed a $1.5 million legislative augmentation for agricultural
research, a $1.5 million legislative augmentation for the Scripps Institution
of Oceanography, and $500,000 in state funding for a UC facility in
Mexico. The governor supported the rest of the UC budget as adopted
by the Legislature, fulfilling the terms of his “compact”
with the university.
The budget assumes the student fee levels approved in March by the
Board of Regents for the 2007-08 year. To supplement state funding in
order to address the university’s budget needs for the 2007-08
year, the Regents adopted fee increases of 7 percent for resident undergraduates,
academic graduate students, and most professional school students. A
substantial proportion of this fee revenue will be returned to financial
aid to preserve UC’s affordability for students.
Key elements of the 2007-08 budget include:
- Enrollment growth: The budget funds growth of 5,000
students (2.4 percent), consistent with the compact between UC and
the governor. This increase will allow UC to meet its commitments
to undergraduate access under the Master Plan for Higher Education
and continue to increase graduate enrollments as well.
- Faculty and staff compensation: The state budget
combined with other university revenues will provide a 5 percent pool
for employee compensation increases, including merit-based and equity-based
salary increases, new salary scales for faculty, health and welfare
benefit cost increases, and related cost increases. This funding level
compares to a 4 percent pool last year; the increase is critical to
begin closing the market pay gaps affecting many UC faculty and staff.
It should be noted that compensation programs vary across the university
and distribution of funding is subject to collective bargaining requirements
where applicable, so individual salary increases will vary.
- Student academic preparation: The governor preserved
$19.3 million in state funding restored to the budget by the Legislature
for student academic preparation programs, which work to improve the
academic achievement and college preparation of students in many of
California’s disadvantaged public schools. This action continues
the 2006-07 state funding level for these programs.
- Research programs: The final budget includes two
research initiatives from the governor’s January budget proposal
– lease revenue bond funding of $30 million for the Helios Project,
an initiative by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to create
sustainable, carbon-neutral sources of energy; and $40 million for
the Energy Biosciences Institute at UC Berkeley, which focuses on
the development of alternative fuels.
The governor also sustained the Legislature’s action to continue
$6 million in state funding for UC labor research programs.
The budget passed by the Legislature did not, however, include
a proposed funding increase of $15 million for operations of the
four UC-based California Institutes for Science and Innovation.
This item will continue to be a high priority for UC, given the
importance of the Institutes to California’s innovation leadership
and economic success.
- UC Merced: The budget continues $14 million in
one-time funding for start-up costs.
- COSMOS: The governor sustained a legislative augmentation
of $500,000 for the California State Summer School for Mathematics
and Science, a UC residential summer academic experience for top high
school students in mathematics and science.
- Mexico City facility: The governor vetoed $500,000
in state funding for UC Mexico research which was allocated for Casa
de California, a facility intended to become the home for many UC
education and research activities in Mexico City. In recent years
this funding principally has been put toward financing of UC’s
purchase and renovation of the facility. UC will need to explore financing
options for the facility in light of the veto.
- Student fees: As noted above, 2007-08 student fee
levels were set by the Regents in March. Mandatory systemwide fees
will be $6,636 per year for resident undergraduates and $7,440 for
resident graduate academic students (these fees do not include campus-based
fees, housing, books, and other costs). Professional school fees vary
by school.
UC will return 33 percent of the revenue generated by the undergraduate
fee increase to financial aid. This means that the university will
be able to provide an additional grant covering 100 percent of the
fee increase to eligible on-time financial aid applicants whose
family incomes are lower than approximately $60,000 per year, and
a grant covering 50 percent of the fee increase to other eligible
on-time financial aid applicants whose family incomes are below
approximately $100,000 per year. The “return to aid”
will be 45 percent at the graduate level and 33 percent for professional
school students.
Full details on student fees and financial aid are available at
www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/budget/studentfees2007.html.
- Capital budget: The budget includes $520 million
in capital improvements funding at UC. This figure includes the $70
million in lease revenue bond funding mentioned above for the Helios
Project and Energy Biosciences Institute, and $450 million in general
obligation bond funding approved by California voters for UC’s
regular capital improvements program. The capital program funds facilities
construction and improvements to address enrollment growth, life safety,
and infrastructure renewal needs on UC’s campuses. Of the $450
million, $130 million is designated for facilities and equipment to
expand UC medical school enrollments and improve health care for currently
underserved populations and communities in California, through expanded
use of tools such as telemedicine.
Full details of the governor’s budget are available at www.ebudget.ca.gov.
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