By
Celina Kareiva
February 8, 2010
Susana Contreras can’t understand why she is still fighting for her education.
Photo by Jennifer Malone.
UW Sophomore Susana Contreras waits with other students outside the Capitol building before delivering petitions to the governor’s office.
The sophomore struggled to fund her first year at the UW and is now questioning whether she will be able to attend next year. With tuition expected to increase by 14 percent, a proposed $23 million cut to financial aid and the suspension of the State Work Study program, Contreras is uncertain what her future holds.
“[The Husky Promise] is a guarantee; that’s one of the main reasons I came to UW,” Contreras said, referring to the program that has funded her education at the UW. “Now, it may not be a promise anymore … How is [President Mark] Emmert supposed to promise that to anybody when it’s all in the legislative control? … I’m faced with having to go back home to community college and having to downgrade my education.”
Contreras and an estimated 200 UW students from all three campuses congregated in Olympia this past Friday in an effort to make their voices heard. At 7 a.m., at the foot of the George Washington statue, UW-Seattle students loaded into buses and headed south for an afternoon of lobbying. Higher Education Advocacy Day is an annual tradition at the university; this year, the number of participants multiplied in size. To accommodate the nearly 300 students who registered, ASUW and the UW Graduate and Professional Student Senate (GPSS) coordinated transportation, free lunches and individual meetings with legislators.
“[The legislators’] decision-making affects our tuition, our lives and our future. We have something to say, and that’s why I’m here today. With Higher Education Advocacy Day, we can actually corner legislators in their offices,” Contreras said with a laugh. “I don’t think they take us seriously, because the youth doesn’t typically vote, but this should show them otherwise.”
Most students met with legislators from their own district and were organized into groups of six or seven, each with its own leader. Contreras met with Rep. Deb Wallace, D-17th District and chair of the House Higher Education Committee, who she has worked with in the past, as a high-school student and member of LEAP (Latino/a Educational Achievement Project).
“[Legislators] have been very supportive and open to listening,” Contreras said during Friday’s lunch break. “I think on a personal level, seeing me will really help influence their decisions.”
The primary issues of concern were financial aid, local control over tuition and alternative revenue sources. ASUW and GPSS encouraged students to share their personal stories to hammer home their point when meeting with representatives. Particular emphasis was placed on Sen. Derek Kilmer’s (D-26th District) tuition bill (SB 6562), which would give the UW Board of Regents the authority to set tuition at the UW. Current amendments to the bill have placed a 9-percent cap on tuition, although ASUW still questions whether local control would compromise transparency and accountability.
Contreras worried aloud that transferring tuition control to the Board of Regents would be problematic. She questioned how much input students would have considering that UW regents are appointed by the governor, instead of voted in by students. Legislators, at least, are obligated to listen to their constituents.
Wallace echoed this concern.
“I believe that the authority and responsibility [of tuition setting] is with the legislature because it has more public visibility. … I’m concerned that if we let go of that authority, we’ll let go of the state funding as well, and it’s important that we balance those two out,” Wallace said. “It’s a hard decision, but we’re the ones who are called to make that decision with public input.”
Contreras said that her main goal for the afternoon was to demonstrate that young people were involved in the fate of the university and would vote accordingly.
“Before, [students recognized] that these issues were important, but it didn’t affect them directly,” Contreras said. “This tuition increase affects every single person on campus, so now it’s uniting us, and having this little advocacy day is really going to get the ball rolling.”
Reach reporter Celina Kareiva at news@dailyuw.com.
5 Comments
#1 Carmen
on February 8, 2010 at 8:13 a.m.(Seattle, WA | Unverified Name)
Rep. Frank Chopp and Jamie Pedersen, who represents the University district #43, have not fought for the UW and let it take much larger budget cuts than any other of the colleges which is why the UW University had a 26% cut last year! ONCE AGAIN right now some in Olympia are trying to cut the UW MORE than any school, for example: WSU 3% and UW 6%!!! Why isn't Representative Chopp and Rep. Pedersen fighting for us? Don't they care about the hundreds of jobs lost when cutting the UW? The number of students who will not be able to go to school? Even with all the generous donations, the UW must have help from the state. That is why they call it a state school. Our state is 46 out of 50 in giving monies to its four year schools support! It is at the top for community colleges. OUCH!!!!!
#2 cmckie
on February 8, 2010 at 1:25 p.m.(Seattle, WA | Unverified Name)
I have news for you... Jamie Pedersen has one constituency - lawyers. Look at who funded his campaign! He's not going to fight for you unless his attorney-friends have something to gain, too. Here's a perfect example... House Bill 1479, a bill to eliminate legalized land theft (adverse possession) was killed by Pedersen. Why? Because his lawyer constituents make A LOT of money litigating adverse possession claims. If you want someone who will represent YOU, then look elsewhere.
#3 Joe D.
on February 8, 2010 at 4:37 p.m.(Location Unknown | UW Community)
The UW is much bigger than the district it sits in-studnets reside in several districts and employees live from Tacoma to Everett and from the top of I-90 to Bremerton
#4 Change
on February 8, 2010 at 5:44 p.m.(Everett, WA | Unverified Name | UW Community)
Pedersen and Chopp are business-funded scumbags that pander to Seattle's affluent property-owners in Wallingford and Capitol Hill.
#5 Matt from Democracy Insurgent
on February 8, 2010 at 8:55 p.m.(Renton, WA | Unverified Name)
I agree we need to fight to save the Husky Promise. We need to organize here at UW to show both Emmert and the legislature that there will be no business as usual on this campus if they break their promises to working class students and students of color.
Susana I also think your skepticism about the Kilmer bill is on point. If the Board of Regents gets tuition setting authority with a "cap" and "oversight", how can we be sure those caps and oversight won't be taken away down the road? If UW has trouble attracting investment for new research how can we be sure that the unelected Regents won't continuously raise tuition to make sure they get good bond ratings by guaranteeing their creditors a consistent income stream? How can we be sure that they won't use students to raise collateral for capital projects like the University of California is doing? In other words, if they have tuition setting authority they could basically take student's tuition and give it to wall street bankers in exchange for the loans necessary to build new buildings to house corporate-oriented research.
If this is the financial model that the UW is moving towards than "non-profitable" departments like American Ethnic Studies could easily be cut down the road. And any students who can't pay that higher tuition could be pushed out of the university until it becomes a country club for rich white kids. All of the struggles oppressed people waged on this campus to make it accessible to their communities would then need to started all over again!
The only way to stop that scenario is through long-term campaigns of aggressive mass protest like they're doing down in California. Rather than compromising with congressman Kilmer we need to fight for a complete freeze on tuition hikes - period.
The next step in this fight is the March 4th student strike at 1 PM on the Quad. We'll be striking in solidarity with students across Washington and around the country who will all be taking action on that day.
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