The Independent Student Newspaper of Northern Kentucky University.

The Northerner

The Independent Student Newspaper of Northern Kentucky University.

The Northerner

The Independent Student Newspaper of Northern Kentucky University.

The Northerner

Breaking news: Regents approve tuition increase (March 19)

The Board of Regents voted unanimously to approve a tuition increase Wednesday.

Resident, full-time undergraduates will pay $1,872 a semester, an increase of 16.4 percent. Nonresident full-time undergraduates will pay $3,996 a semester, an increase of 7.1 percent.

Graduate, business graduate and law students also face an increase.

Approximately 2.5 percent of the total increase will be used to support a $31 million student union.

The Regents approved other increases as well.

The parking fee will increase from $48 to $96 over the next two years.

Double occupancy room rental will increase from $1,128 to $1,184 per semester, a 5 percent increase. Basic meal plans will go from $990 to $1020 per semester.

These increases come a little over a week after Kentucky’s General Assembly passed a long awaited operating budget.

The Legislature cut NKU’s base budget, which is recurring, by around $731,000 for fiscal year 2002/2003. The university also received cuts during fiscal year 2001/2002 totaling around $537,000.

While the base budget was increased $1.8 million for fiscal year 2003/2004, the University only netted around $500,000 because of the previous cuts.

Administrators said the increases were necessary for NKU to retain its quality and continue to grow.

“I don’t like to sit here and recommend a 16.4 percent tuition increase,” Votruba said.

Both Hunter and Votruba talked about underfuding the University has had to deal with, saying NKU receives the least amount of state support in comparison to other benchmark institutions.

At a Student Government Association meeting Monday he said if tuition wasn’t raised, NKU would be a different place with larger classes and fewer services.

At a joint meeting of the Policy and Finance Committee, which preceded the Regents’ meeting, Votruba and Gerald Hunter, Vice President for Enrollment and Financial Planning, presented a list of what they called essential investments taken from the Vision, Voices and Values meetings held with students, faculty, community members and community leaders last year.

At the top of the list is the new Student Union, which will provide meeting spaces for students and other groups on campus. The building will also house a “one stop shop” for students, with services such as the Registrar and Bursar housed closely together.

The Regents authorized the planning, funding, and construction of the new building.

Votruba said the building was important for attracting new students as well as serving current students.

“This budget will help us to create a state-of-the art $31 million dollar building that will be a hub for all students,” said SGA President Katie Herschede, who serves on the Board of Regents, in a speech before the vote. “It will be a place where traditional students, non-traditional students, adult students and prospective students will be able to gather and congregate.”

While Herschede voted for the increase, she pointed out that she felt the university was shorted by the Legislature.

“Regardless of how you ideologically feel about tuition, there is little room to argue that students at NKU are not getting their fair share from the Commonwealth of Kentucky,” she said.

“Some lawmakers would lead you to believe that they didn’t raise taxes this year,” she said. “They [did raise] taxes, more commonly known to students as tuition and they raised it on the backs of the most vulnerable population in this state…students.”

Some SGA senators have expressed concern over both the construction of the Student Union and a raise in tuition.

Senator Joseph Myers presented SGA with a resolution Monday stating that SGA should vote no in support of an increase.

“The current and future Students of Northern Kentucky University do not want to see their tuition raised in order to pay for things that will not benefit them,” read one section of the resolution.

The resolution was ultimately voted down by Herschede after the Senate tied 7-7 with one abstention.

The increase was not discussed further because too many Senators left the meeting and quorum was lost.

Before the meeting Herschede said she would vote in the Regents meeting however SGA voted.

Pick up a copy of next week’s Northerner for further coverage.