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Volume 53, Issue 10
November 6, 2017
PAGE 4 Faculty and students assemble ColumbiaChronicle.com coalition at Save Columbia forum
Danger! Urbex photos may be cool, but they come with a risk. » ERIN BROWN/CHRONICLE
‘Let’s slow it down this year’:
Tuition raises, but not as much as it could have
STUDENTS CAN EXPECT larger bills after a 2 percent undergraduate tuition increase and an average 2.8 percent increase in on-campus housing costs were announced Oct. 31 during an annual presentation by President and CEO Kwang-Wu Kim and other administrative leaders at a Student Government Association meeting. This year’s uptick, less than last year’s 4 percent increase, is consistent with annual tuition increases dating back prior to 2010. The $510 added to Columbia’s current $25,580 tuition will bring the annual tuition to $26,090 starting fall 2018.
Fees for registration, student health, technology and student instruction will remain the same, while student activity fees will be decided by SGA in the spring, and U-Pass fees will be decided by the Chicago Transit Authority, according to an Oct. 31 collegewide email from Kim. When deciding on the fall 2018 tuition— which was agreed upon at a Sept. 26 Board of Trustees meeting—Kim said the Board wanted the increase to align with national inflation rates, which were 2 percent for the first half of 2017, according to National Labor Board statistics. Kim said he was told during conversations with Board of Trustees members that, from a financial perspective, the
increase should have been higher because of the recent enrollment decline, but the Board settled on 2 percent to give students financial relief. “It was intended as a gesture,” Kim said. “I realize that it is still going up, but I think the Board felt like we’ve been raising the tuition 4 percent now a couple years in a row, [so] let’s slow it down this year. It was less a financial conversation than the board trying to think about a small way it could make it a little bit better than it might have [been].” At the meeting, Kim said regardless of rising tuition over the years, Columbia is by far one of the least expensive private fouryear nonprofit colleges with a focus on the creative arts. Kim also spoke about how
much of Columbia’s budget goes to helping students offset tuition costs through financial aid. Of the college’s $187.7 million budget, released Oct. 31, $34.4 million is dedicated to scholarships, according to the college’s 2018 Fiscal Year budget. “That is above and beyond the aid students are able to get through Pell grants, MAP grants and other subsidized loans,” Kim said, referring to scholarship spending. After the presentation, administrative members, including Kim, Chief of Staff Laurent Pernot and Vice President of Student Affairs Sharon Wilson-Taylor, fielded questions from SGA members regarding the tuition increase.
SEE TUITION, PAGE 11
» CONNOR CARYNSKI CAMPUS EDITOR