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Endorsement
of Resolution of Assembly of Professors
The General
Faculty Council, as the representative body for the Academic General Faculty,
the Administrative and Professional General Faculty, and the Senior Professional
Research Staff of the University of Virginia, has voted to endorse the
resolution of the Assembly of Professors, dated October 14, 2002, recommending
that tuition at the University be raised in response to the current budget
crisis.
Lynda S. White,
Chair
General Faculty Council
October 22, 2002
General Resolution in Support of a Phased and Fair Rise in
Tuition Fees
WHEREAS:
- The University of Virginia
is absorbing unprecedented cuts imposed by the state in its operating
budgets ($33.8 million in this fiscal year alone)
- Aggregate state funding for
higher education in Virginia?by the state's own formula?has fallen short
by $300 million per year for the past twelve years
- The University faces even
greater cuts when the legislature reconvenes in January 2003
- Political leaders in Richmond
show no indication of addressing the structural shortfalls in state
revenues by reforming the tax code
- The effects of these cuts,
both acute and chronic, threaten the ability of the University of Virginia
to fulfill its fundamental mission of excellence in research and teaching
We, the Assembly of Professors, RESOLVE
- To urge the administration
and the Board of Visitors of the University to take the necessary steps
to introduce a phased and fair increase in the rates of student tuition
until it reaches levels comparable to peer institutions such as the
University of Michigan.Ê This
rise in tuition must be guided by several core principles, namely
- The resulting increase in
revenues should come directly to the University, without further reductions
in state funding
- Financial aid available to
students should be commensurately increased, with the goal of meeting
the financial aid needs of every qualified student
- The allocation of additional
funds generated by the tuition increase should be fairly apportioned
by the provost so it will have the greatest positive effect on the
core academic mission of the University.
- We further ask that the Assembly
of Professors forward this resolution to the Board of Visitors for its
urgent consideration, and that the Faculty Senate, the Student Council,
and other constituencies throughout the University consider, endorse
and support this resolution.
Assembly of Professors
October 2002
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