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Volume 73, Issue 09

Page 1

HIGHLANDER

THE

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, RIVERSIDE

VOL. 73 ISSUE 9

For the week of Tuesday 26, November 2024

est. 1954

Potential federal budget cuts under a second Trump presidency poses challenges for UC

With looming federal budget cuts to financial aid and research, UC must protect accessibility to higher education and preserve critical research. By: The Editorial Board

I

f President-elect Donald Trump's cabinet picks, including high-profile figures such as Marco Rubio and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., are any signal, a drastic and concerning change in the country’s policy direction is coming. No area, including higher education, will likely be spared. Based on the former president’s track record and campaign promises, Trump has indicated he would reduce financial aid, privatize student loans and decrease research funding. As one of the largest recipients of federal research funding and serving approximately 76,000 low-income students across the state who receive federal financial aid, the University of California (UC) faces significant risks in a returning Trump administration...Read More on page 7, Opinions

Holly Dawson // THE HIGHLANDER

Service and healthcare workers hit the strike-lines UCR service, auxiliary and healthcare workers protest UC bad-faith bargaining By: Mata Elangovan, Managing Editor

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housands of workers who are part of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 3299 (AFSCME 3299) from all University of California (UC) campuses and health centers went on strike on Nov. 20 and Nov. 21. Around 100 members were present at UC Riverside’s (UCR) picket line between Bannockburn Village and the Arts Building. On Nov. 14, AFSCME Local 3299 announced the strike on their X account. In their post, they shared, “Frontline Service and Patient Care UC workers are on strike to protest UC’s bad-faith bargaining and unfair labor practices. UC’s illegal con-

duct has left workers who take care of students and patients every day with no choice but to go on strike,” and encouraged both union members and community members to join them on their strike line. The statewide strike was authorized with 99% of members voting in support. A few weeks prior, on Oct. 18, AFSCME Local 3299 posted on X that they had filed a Unfair Labor Practice (ULP) against the UC system. This charge was made against “UC’s bad faith bargaining, including illegal and unilateral increases in healthcare costs.”...Read More on page 6, News


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