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,
as
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.
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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