The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's
May 13, 2005
ND tuition, fees continue to rise
Article Tools: Page 1 of 3
In
what has become as traditional as football and finals for university
students across the country, the cost of a Notre Dame education has
risen once again. Tuition and fees increases, which were
announced in the spring for the 2003-04 academic year, jumped from
$32,515 to $34,680 for each on-campus student. While a $1.660 rise in
tuition itself has constituted the bulk of the increase, the
University's Board of Trustees approved a 2003-04 tuition package that
added for the first time a $50 per semester Health Center Access Fee to
its undergraduate tuition. Ann Kleva, director of University
Health Services, said that the increase was made after Health Services,
the University Counseling Center and the Office of Alcohol and Drug
Education submitted a joint budget proposal to the Office of Student
Affairs suggesting the need for increased funding to the three
organizations, which classify themselves as wellness and prevention
services for the University community. After careful review,
the proposal was approved by the administration and passed on to the
Board of Trustees, which gave the addition a positive nod as a
component of the 2003-04 tuition and fees package. "This is not
taken lightly," Kleva said. "[The administration] is very sensitive to
any tuition increases. But to be able to provide these programs on
campus, you've got to support them." Notre Dame is not alone
among its peers nationally when it comes to charging students for
medical services within its general tuition package. A large part of
the health and wellness organizations' report to Student Affairs
included benchmarking the University's programs with those of other
comparable national institutions, such as Boston College, Duke, Indiana
University, Clemson and Texas A & M, among others. Most of these
institutions, Kleva said, charge students directly for services
rendered, on top of the annual health services fee. "They
charge anywhere from $55 per semester at Texas A & M to over $200
per semester at Duke," she said. "We thought $50 per semester was a
realistic and workable fee to help us out in the future."
Continued... Article Tools: Page 1 of 3
In what has become as
traditional as football and finals for university students across the
country, the cost of a Notre Dame education has risen once again.
Tuition and fees increases, which were announced in the spring for the
2003-04 academic year, jumped from $32,515 to $34,680 for each
on-campus student. While a $1.660 rise in tuition itself has
constituted the bulk of the increase, the University's Board of
Trustees approved a 2003-04 tuition package that added for the first
time a $50 per semester Health Center Access Fee to its undergraduate
tuition.
Ann Kleva, director of University Health Services, said that the
increase was made after Health Services, the University Counseling
Center and the Office of Alcohol and Drug Education submitted a joint
budget proposal to the Office of Student Affairs suggesting the need
for increased funding to the three organizations, which classify
themselves as wellness and prevention services for the University
community.
After careful review, the proposal was approved by the administration
and passed on to the Board of Trustees, which gave the addition a
positive nod as a component of the 2003-04 tuition and fees
package.
"This is not taken lightly," Kleva said. "[The administration] is very
sensitive to any tuition increases. But to be able to provide these
programs on campus, you've got to support them."
Notre Dame is not alone among its peers nationally when it comes to
charging students for medical services within its general tuition
package. A large part of the health and wellness organizations' report
to Student Affairs included benchmarking the University's programs with
those of other comparable national institutions, such as Boston
College, Duke, Indiana University, Clemson and Texas A & M, among
others. Most of these institutions, Kleva said, charge students
directly for services rendered, on top of the annual health services
fee.
"They charge anywhere from $55 per semester at Texas A & M to over $200
per semester at Duke," she said. "We thought $50 per semester was a
realistic and workable fee to help us out in the future."
Kleva attributed increasing operating costs in part to the
ever-increasing costs of health care and the documentation of thousands
of student immunization and health records that the University is
required by state and federal governments to keep on file.
"We must provide tuberculosis immunizations for international students
and those from high-risk areas," she said. "We must keep and document
their records - and all students' immunization records . . . We are
also required to provide education to students regarding the hepatitis
and meningitis vaccines. That's a full-time job in itself."
The costs of maintaining a full-time, 24-hour a day health center have
become increasingly difficult to address, Kleva said, as updating
academic buildings and hiring new faculty often take precedence over
spending tuition dollars on such auxiliary programs as health and
wellness services.
"We're in an academic environment," Kleva said, "but we provide support
to that academic environment - but tuition is coveted to provide the
best academic environment possible. We almost have to rely on our own
resources ... to be able to provide 24-hour service and to improve and
expand education. We do provide quite comprehensive health services on
campus, and for that we require additional funding. We don't want to
decrease services."
Students who visit the University's health center, which is open 24
hours a day during the academic year, are not charged for such basic
services as physician visits, drop-in appointments or overnight stays
in the center's upstairs inpatient care department. The center provides
a free van service to transport students to and from off-campus doctor,
dentist, physical therapy and counseling appointments during normal
business hours.
Kleva estimated that the health center has had an average of 18,000
annual visits during the last three years in its walk-in clinic, which
includes allergy and travel/immunization services.
Since the addition of the annual fee, University Health Services has
not increased its operating expenses, and has continued to assess the
lowest costs possible to students who utilize such services as X-rays
and pharmacy, Kleva said.
"The costs that we charge are way below market," she said. "We're not
in the business to make money - we're in the business to pay for
supplies."
The extra revenue generated by the addition to this year's tuition
package will go directly to a Student Affairs fund that has been
allocated to the office's three health and wellness organizations.
"[The money] is solely used to support student health and wellness and
prevention services on campus," Kleva said. "This was a necessary
increase to maintain the richness of healthcare on campus."
The $50 per semester Health Center Access Fee that students and parents
will be assessed is not expected to increase over the next few years,
Kleva said.
"I don't anticipate an increase - we feel in the very near future that
this isn't something that's going to increase annually," she said.
Another increase to the tuition bill that students and parents received
in the mail this year was in the room telephone charge, an annual fee
that covers the costs of local phone and voicemail services.
Room phone fees increased $7 in 2003-04 from the last academic year, a
4.5 percent rise comparable to that which affected room and board
charges.
"We key the phone rate increase to the increase in room and board,"
said the University's deputy CIO Dr. Dewitt Latimer. "Like room and
board, the phone service is tied to the cost of providing it."
Although dorm room phone charges have increased for students, they have
not risen at the same rate assessed to the rest of campus. Faculty,
staff and administrative offices have seen an 11 percent increase in
their own phone services this year, he said.
While increased revenue will cover the ever-fluctuating costs of
operating phone systems on campus, it will also allow the University to
utilize increased technology in the voicemail system used by faculty,
staff and students alike.
"The old phone systems that don't treat voice as data will be replaced
by phone systems that do treat voice as data," Latimer said.
Latimer heads the newly created Integrated Communication Services
directorate on campus, which has brought the former Telecommunications
department under the auspices of the Office of Information Technology
since July 1 of this year.
"One of the reasons we merged the two departments was to gain the
benefits of common technology," he said. He has led the effort to
research possibilities for upgrading the University's voice messaging
system over the course of the next few years.