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You’re getting screwed!

Why it matters

Published: Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Updated: Thursday, March 11, 2010 10:03

The Georgia legislature and the USG are going full-speed ahead on the plan to slash $300-400 million from the higher education budget for fiscal year 2011. As I wrote last week and as anyone not living under a rock knows, that is a gargantuan soul-crushing budget cut. It’s not so much a budget cut as it is a budget evisceration.

Disemboweling the budget for our colleges and universities will destroy Georgia’s ability to turn out workers prepared for the current and future economy. Furthermore it will horribly stifle the ability of low and middle-income students to pay for the expenses of going to school, even if they have the HOPE scholarship—and don’t count on that existing much longer either.

So not only will this cause students who come into or stay in the USG to go into more debt and work more hours just to scrape by, it will prevent thousands of students from ever even getting the chance to go in the first place.

This budget desecration will at once drastically reduce enrollment while skyrocketing costs and subvert the quality of the education and services received. Defiling the budget to the tune of $400 million—which comes to nearly 20 percent for AASU—is so moronically, surpassingly stupid as to appear to have been the pipe dream of some cartoon caricature of an evil, fat-cat captain of industry or cynical politician.

But it’s real. And you’re getting screwed. This monumental rebuke to sanity, this reversion to the idiotic can still be fought. There are Facebook groups dedicated to the cause. There will be a silent protest today at the corner of Abercorn Street and Mall Boulevard from noon to 2 p.m. There is a group planning a protest rally for March 15 in Atlanta with almost 43,000 USG students pledging to support or attend.

Nearly a hundred positions will be cut at AASU, five majors will disappear, there will be fewer classes and bigger class sizes; there will be less instruction and higher tuition; there will be higher fees and fewer services from them.

So get out there and do your duty to your fellow students, your state and yourself. Protest this; protest this as strongly and as stridently and as irascibly as you can. This is important. This is about the state of higher education’s future. This is about the state’s future. This is about your future. Don’t let the pitch sail by.

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1 comments Log in to Comment

Lindsey Teets
Mon Mar 22 2010 17:01
Lets face it the University System of Georgia, USG, are fairly cheap compared to other state university institutions. This discussion of how people will no longer be able to afford schooling is nothing but a scare tactic. Seeing as how most students work and go to school they are already paying for their cost of living so that can be ruled out of most any discussion. Now universities vary in price from around 1500 to say 4000 a semester.

That being said it is hard to imagine a person who was qualified to go to college, and lets face it not everyone who goes to college is qualified to be in college, can not afford to go to college. There are millions in scholarships and grants and subsidized students loans that can make college free or at the least provide a very low interest rate to go to school. These underprivileged students would easily fit into one of those categories.

Some students would be much better served with going to a trade or technology school and unknowingly to most people could potentially earn more than their college educated counterparts and those that are pressed away may actually decrease the burden on our overworked professors. Remember it is the bottom percentile students that cause the most drain on a professor’s time and resources that they could be using to educate the average to above average students. This would actually help to improve the USG by weeding out those who are the largest drain on our university system.

Businesses employ this system by firing under-performing workers, those who are a drain on its resources. Why should a college not do the same? We allow students to continue taking classes that they have either dropped out of or failed multiple times and continue to subsidize them, on a state level. This is at the expense of qualified students who have been kept out of the class potentially forcing them lose valuable time in college when they could be more productive employed as an educated worked in the labor force.

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