Trinity News, volume 61, issue 2

Page 1

TRINITY NEWS

Tuesday 14th October 2014

1

TCDSU President, Domhnall McGlacken-Byrne, at the USI Rally for Education on 8th October. Photo: Matthew Mulligan

Student maintenance grant to be protected in Budget

Photo: Samuel Verbi

The student maintenance grant and back-to-education allowance will be ring-fenced in Budget 2015, Trinity News can exclusively reveal.

James Wilson News Editor

The student maintenance grant is set to be protected from further cutbacks in today’s Budget, Trinity News has learned. It is understood that the back-to-education allowance, designed to help single parents, the disabled and unemployed back into education, will also be ring-fenced. Overall, spending on education is set to increase for the first time since 2010, with the departments of health and social protection also set to see their budgets increase. Previously, the minister for education and skills, Jan O’Sullivan, had been non-committal about maintaining student supports at their current levels, telling the Dáil only last Tuesday that “changes to any public service, including the student grant scheme, cannot be ruled out.” 76,000 students, or approximately 38% of all full-time students are currently supported by the student maintenance grant. Budget 2014 was the first in four years not to cut their payment. The average grant recipient is entitled to ¤3,025 per academic year, or ¤84 a week, while a recent Bank of Ireland study estimated that the cost of attending third-level education in Ireland amounts to an annual rant ¤13,000. While the student maintenance grant will be protected later today, it is likely that the

student contribution charge will still be increased by ¤250 in Budget 2015, despite strong opposition from a number of backbench Labour TDs. While both Fine Gael and Labour pledged at the last election not to increase the registration fee from its then annual rate of ¤2,000 – Labour even pledged to return it to the ¤1,500 level last paid in 2010 – Minister O’Sullivan has been evasive about the charges’ future. When asked a question in the Dáil about whether the fees would increase in 2015 as planned, and whether she acknowledged the hardship caused to families, she merely commented that the fee would increase in accordance with the plan laid out by her predecessor, and pointed out that some 50% of students who qualify for free fees have their contribution paid by the state under the student grant scheme. This year’s likely increase in the student contribution charge is the last in a series of pre-scheduled rises announced by former minister for education Ruairi Quinn in November 2011. Less than 100 days before, he had committed to opposing and campaigning against “any new form of third-level fees” but he reneged on this agreement shortly after going into coalition when he set out a fouryear plan that would see yearly

increases of ¤250 in the student contribution charge until 2015. This year’s increase will mean that student fees will have risen by ¤1,000 over the course of a four-year period. A face-to-face poll of 130 students carried out by Trinity News last week revealed largescale opposition to any further increases in the charge. 35% of respondents judged the charge’s likely rise to ¤3,000 to be the “correct amount” but 55% thought the figure already “too high”. The Union of Students in Ireland (USI) has been campaigning to protect student supports in recent months, calling for the restoration of the ¤25 million cut from the budget in 2013 and 2014, and for the minister to establish a “timeline” for the restoration of the contribution fee to “pre-crisis levels”. In its pre-budget submission, the USI pointed out that the cost of going to college has risen significantly, while financial assistance has been cut. According to the submission, 64% of families struggle financially to put their children through college - a problem that will be exasperated by contribution fee hikes and the increase in rents (by 10% across the country and by 17% in Dublin). Speaking to this paper on Sunday night, USI president, Laura Harmon, said that the union is

“cautiously optimistic about the protection of students’ supports in Tuesday’s Budget. Students’ unions across the country have been campaigning on this issue since the summer and we hope that work will pay off.” This year’s maintenance of the grant at current levels, as well as the proposed increases to certain departments’ budgets, comes in the wake of a more optimistic economic forecast in recent months. Unemployment has dropped steadily since last October’s Budget, falling from 12.3% to 11.1%. This is its lowest level since February 2009, slightly below the Eurozone average of 11.4%, although youth unemployment remains stubbornly high at 25.2%, a drop of a mere 0.6% in a year. Growth in the economy has also picked up with Irish Gross Domestic Product (GDP) expanding 7.7% in the second quarter of 2014, the largest single increase since 2007. As a consequence, the budget deficit has fallen to 3.7% of GDP and is set to fall to 2.4% next year. The extra spending is likely to push the deficit back up to 2.7% but this remains crucially below the 3% maximum allowed under European Union law.

Inside

PERMAID TALKS ABOUT LIVING LIFE AMPHIBIOUSLY AND TO THE FULLEST; WE EXPLORE THE FIFA PHONEMENON; PLUS YOUR VERY OWN CUT OUT AND KEEP MOSCHINO BARBIE.

>> >> >>

William Foley’s verdict on last week’s USI rally? Must try harder.

Adina Sulemane meets international students queuing for visas outside the Garda National Immigration Bureau.

DUFC returns to College Park in style with a 26-17 win over Malone RFC.

How to avoid the freshers’ flu

Features p.8

Comment p.13

SciTech p.20

Sport p. 24


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Trinity News, volume 61, issue 2 by Trinity News - Issuu