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College Students To Protest Higher Ed Budget Cuts Across The Country

The Huffington Post/AP     First Posted: 04/13/11 12:45 PM ET   Updated: 06/13/11 06:12 AM ET

Story by AP/Amy Taxin

LONG BEACH, Calif. -- More than 10,000 people marched, waved signs and occupied buildings at college campuses across California on Wednesday in a show of opposition to state budget cuts to education that could lead to higher tuition, larger class sizes and lower enrollment.

The rallies were part of a day of protest planned for all 23 California State University campuses. Similar events took place in states such as Massachusetts and New Jersey, where legislators are slashing education spending to close huge budget shortfalls.

Photos by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

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Students and faculty members hold a rally before their march on the campus of California State University, Northridge, demonstrating against proposed budget cuts at all 23 Cal State University campuses statewide on April 13, 2011 in Los Angeles, California.
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In California, students peacefully occupied administration buildings in protest on at least six campuses, said Brian Ferguson, a spokesman for the California Faculty Association, which worked with students and employees to organize the demonstrations.

He estimated about 12,000 students, faculty members and others participated in the rallies statewide.

In Long Beach, about 800 of those demonstrators marched to the student services administration building – which had already shut down as a precaution – carrying signs reading "Education is a right" and "No more greed."

"I'm just mad at the government for funding more for prison and war than for education," said Cecillee Espanol, a 22-year-old psychology major at the university's Long Beach campus, who said she's going to have to get a job next year to cover the cost of her classes.

Another 1,000 people rallied at California State University, Sacramento, including about 100 who occupied a campus building.

Deep budget cuts in California during the height of the recession two years ago led to sharp tuition hikes, employee furloughs, course cutbacks and reduced enrollment at the CSU and University of California systems.

The state restored some of that funding last year. But California's public colleges and universities face another round of painful cuts as Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislature seek to close the state's $26.6 billion budget deficit.

"We've been carving away and carving away and carving away," said Lillian Taiz, president of the California Faculty Association. "The path we are on is almost suicidal for the state."

UC and CSU would lose $500 million under the governor's budget proposal, but his plan depends on voters approving temporary increases in sales, vehicle and personal income taxes. So far, Brown hasn't secured the Republican support needed to hold a special election to even allow a vote on the tax question.

Without that tax revenue, the state's public colleges and universities could see much deeper cuts, which could lead to soaring tuition bills, fewer undergraduate seats and other drastic measures.

Faculty leaders say the cuts threaten to reduce student access to Cal State, sometimes called the People's University, which serves large numbers of low-income students, many of whom are the first in their families to attend college.

Brian Delas Armas, a 26-year-old master's degree student, said some of the anthropology classes he is required to take aren't being offered regularly anymore. Jason Pinzon, a 19-year-old freshman at California State University, Long Beach, said the more than $4,000 in fees he pays each year makes it difficult to cover his expenses.

"This semester I just barely had enough for my books," Pinzon said.

Faculty members say the younger generation is being cheated out of the kind of education they received in California – and that enabled them to pursue their careers.

Taiz said she is the prime example. She was a mother of two children and on welfare when she went to school and became a history professor.

"This is an investment," she said. "It has made us the envy of the world."

___

Associated Press writers Terence Chea and Marcus Wohlsen in San Francisco and Adam Weintraub in Sacramento contributed to this report.

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04:45 PM on 04/14/2011
Kids-

Your Governor clearly wants to prioritize money to the public employee unions that are helping him scare the people into paying higher taxes. You are of no use to Jerry, you have no political clout.

You might consider unionizing and buying some politicians. Seems to work for cops and prison guards.

Ciao

N.
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Edguy52
Resist and Exist: Obama 2012
04:01 PM on 04/14/2011
I'm happy students at CSUN stood for a serious change in the education system, but I am deeply saddened with the TURNOUT. CSUN has a big student population, I don't even think 25% of the campus students came out to show their support . . . at this rate, a negative change will take effect.
01:43 AM on 04/15/2011
they tend not to vote either...sad
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JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
02:33 PM on 04/14/2011
So go to another school. Nothing is keeping you tied to one school. Use your freedom to move.
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Spank05
01:14 PM on 04/14/2011
10-12K seems like an awfully low number of students protesting this.

There are 23 campuses in the Cal State System. A few of them have over 20K students including Cal State LA and Cal State Long Beach.... over 400K students system wide.

Was this number under reported?
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dbrett480
08:42 PM on 04/13/2011
While budget cuts in higher education are a concern, I'd be much more worried about the cuts in public safety. Inmates with very high chances of recidivism are going to be released into counties that have gutted their jails and probation departments. High tuition is a concern, but I'd be protesting the criminals being released back onto our streets without any supervision.
03:53 PM on 04/13/2011
Why do republicans hate public education?
11:19 PM on 04/13/2011
I guess because public education is doing such a "great" job...our students rank 26 and 27 in the world in math and science even though our public education systems spend more money per student than any country in the world. a real good return on our tax dollars.
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Edguy52
Resist and Exist: Obama 2012
03:59 PM on 04/14/2011
But who is at fault, public education, or the system of public education itself? I would suggest the latter.
07:56 PM on 04/14/2011
if that is true how is spending much less money going to create a smarter society? as a student receiving financial aid its a huge deal to me that the cost per unit will increase so greatly. I just dont the conservative philosophy behind this if your numbers our correct, I mean their kids go to school as well or do they just blindly follow whatever the big guys say.
03:35 PM on 04/13/2011
Just cutting welfare to illegals in CA would save the education cuts.
03:21 PM on 04/13/2011
I'm a senior in college right now and I understand the weight of the debt we carry. Having said that, the vast majority of students have absolutely no one to blame for these budget cuts but themselves. Only 9% of people our age voted in 2010. Young people have screwed themselves over royally this time because they didn't feel like voting. Thanks guys. The bed is made now because they didn't vote, and now we all have to lay in it. You gotta play if you want to win...
03:37 PM on 04/13/2011
Nobody told them when where and whom this time.
02:30 PM on 04/13/2011
Well I hope these College students get out and vote in 2012 and remember which party insisted on these cuts. Republican ideology; an educated voter is a bad thing.
03:51 PM on 04/13/2011
When they get out they will realize how badly they have been taken advantage of by you Commies and turn into Republicans.
12:47 AM on 04/14/2011
doubt that, you all think them elitist or if they choose public service in the way of being a teacher; they are considered unreasonable to even consider being a unionista
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dbrett480
12:59 PM on 04/13/2011
These tuition increases can be stopped by reforming the way the higher education system operates in CA. General education classes at UC schools are incredibly expensive. Why not transfer the GE students from UC schools to community colleges or even CSU schools where the classes are cheaper? We don't need to fund three separate ways of acquiring the exact same education.

Community colleges should be dedicated to general education or the first two years of college. CSU schools should be dedicated to bachelor degrees, arts, and humanities. UC schools should be dedicated to advanced degrees, med school, sciences, and technology.
12:51 AM on 04/14/2011
dbrett480 

STOP you are making entirely too much sense... you've got yourself another FAN
06:35 PM on 04/14/2011
Not really. How on earth are students supposed to go to community colleges instead, when they are turning students away by the thousands? There's no room for the ones who are already there.
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04:51 PM on 04/14/2011
If you applied to UC Berkeley (my alma mater), the university would not be sustainable in present form. Perhaps you would like half the campus to be used as a prison or a police academy? The USA (including you) have benefited from the many thousands of people that graduated with a BA or BS from UC Berkeley, UC Los Angeles, etc. You would have a girl or guu with perfect SAT scores go to Cal State Fresno???? LOL. Dude, these people would go to Harvard or Yale if you scaled back great unis like Berkeley.
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dbrett480
05:17 PM on 04/14/2011
People are free to go to whatever college they want, but when the government has to pay for it we need to prioritize what is offered at each university. I see no good reason why someone needs to receive a bachelor degree in arts/humanities/social sciences from UC Berkeley when the same degree can be given out for much cheaper at San Jose State.
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lilipilicious
12:26 PM on 04/13/2011
yeah like anyone's gonna care. These people need ot organize and go lobby in DC like the banks do - they have to stay there 24/7, send in charismatic folks who can persuade and pressure, do fundraising so they can bribe Congress. Protesting is so 1800s. The real power lies in shaming publicly and of course lobbying like it was going out of style.