VOL. 12, NO. 120

California State University, Long Beach May 24, 2006
.
     
 
 
 


Editorial Staff

Jamie Rowe
Editor in Chief

Katie Plourd

Managing Editor

Sean Cocca
News Editor


Mellani Lubuag
Asst. News Editor


Starr T. Balmer
City Editor

Joe Serna
Amber Muranaka
Asst. City Editor
s

Brigid McGuire

Diversions Editor


Magnolia Howell
Asst. Diversions Editor

Bradley Zint
Opinion Editor

Lauren Williams
Asst. Opinion Editor

Kim Oswell

Sports Editor

Kyle Cavaness
Asst. Sports Editor

Krystle Ralston
Calendar Editor

Tracy Roman
Photo Editor

Erika Jones
Chief Photographer


Rachel Furlong
Jennifer Frehn
David Whisler

Copy Editors

Beverly Munson
General Manager

Jennie Lessel
Assistant to the General Manager

Jovanna Rosado
Advertising Representative

Sara Watanasirisuk
Gynneth
Harper
Daisy Cisneros
Stacy Hopper

Office Assistants

Jamie Eggleston
Production Manager

Sara Watanasirisuk
Sarah Leavitt
Production Assistants

Gia Marie Trovela

Web Assistant

Lin Jay Wang
Blake Rector
Kristina Price
Circulation Staff

 

 

. News  
 

Lt. Gov. Bustamante voices concerns for CSU student fees



By Joseph Serna
Online Forty-Niner
Assistant City Editor



Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante attended the Cal State University Board of Trustees meeting Tuesday, as an ex-officio trustee member.

Following the meeting, Bust-amante spoke about other matters concerning the CSU system.

Bustamante discussed how rising tuition affects middle-income students.

“ If you’re a low-income student, you get a certain amount of grant and financial aid that assists you…and if you’re wealthy it doesn’t make a huge difference on the financial side,” Bustamante said.

“ But for the middle-income, working-class students…there are huge financial problems.”

He conceded that low-income students do not have it easy by any stretch, but also middle-income students face a growing trend of trading class time for work simply to afford a higher education.

“ They’re increasing tuition when they should be trying to figure out how to make tuition and [the student] experience here more affordable,” Bustamante said. “But the financial realities that the focus is on right now is that they need to increase it and I think it’s the wrong direction.”

He said he and possibly one other trustee are opposed to student fee increases, and the majority of the board favors raising student fees because of prior arrangements with the state.

Additionally, Bustamante said he doesn’t favor the continual rise of CSU executive salaries to attract the best administrators, while student tuition also continues to rise.

“ Though we seem to be working on one part of the equation, I don’t think we’re working hard enough on the other part. And I think the student is again being left out of the equation,” he said.

 


Calendar

Display Ads

Front Page

univmag

 

News

....
CSULB women find glass ceiling hard to break

....New Generation Y’ers change outlook for CSULB graduates

....
Sociology professor describes work experience

....
Lt. Gov. Bustamante voices concerns for CSU student fees

....
Cal State Long Beach plans to increase teachers, education

....Minors benefit students future career, plans

....
Never say ‘eventually,’ eventually you will plain miss out

....Graduating senior has enlightening college experiences

....CSULB love story shows family legacies, memories



Senior Goodbyes

 

ADVERTISEMENT


.
©2006 Daily Forty-Niner. All rights reserved