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MORE CUTS POSSIBLE: Students plan budget protest

Organizers urge skipping of UNLV classes, show of force for legislators

If things work out the way student leaders hope, college classes across the valley will be devoid of students today.

There's a walkout scheduled for 10 a.m. today at UNLV to protest another round of budget cuts. Students are being encouraged to skip class and caravan to the Sawyer Building downtown, where the Legislature's Interim Finance Committee will be meeting.


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Adam Cronis, the student body president at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said the higher ed system cannot suffer another round of cuts without seriously damaging students' educations. That is a mantra the state's higher education leaders have been repeating since word came down 21/2 weeks ago that the state expects to be almost $900 million short of what it had budgeted for.

Gov. Jim Gibbons called Monday night for a special session of the Legislature to deal with the shortfall.

Cronis said students will gather outside the committee meeting at 11 a.m. today. There will be speeches, he said, and likely some chanting designed to get the attention of lawmakers.

The goal, he said, is for the students to be heard. They hope that a member or two of the committee will come down and listen to what they have to say. Because the committee will be meeting to discuss issues unrelated to higher education, Cronis and others said they will not disrupt the meeting.

Students fear more cuts could delay them from graduating, eliminate some programs and force some students to quit college altogether. Higher education took cuts in 2007, 2008 and 2009.

College of Southern Nevada student Justin McAffee said students hope to get the legislators to do more than listen.

"We're hoping to send a message: 'Look, if you guys don't respect education, we're going to take this to the ballot and hold you accountable,'" he said.

Nathaniel Waugh, the student president at CSN, said student government leaders there are not encouraging a walkout but are encouraging CSN students to participate in the rally at the committee meeting.

"We don't want to call it a walkout here because it sends the wrong message," he said.

McAffee said CSN students were planning a rally, but they decided to join the UNLV students because it would have a bigger impact.

"Let's just do this together to make some more noise," said McAffee, with the school's Capitol Club, which he described as a nonpartisan group aimed to get students politically involved.

UNLV students said they scheduled the rally for a time when classes were in session because that is when the legislative committee is meeting.

The students have encouraged professors to join them.

"I sincerely hope that they do, as we are all at risk when it comes to the budget crisis," Jessica Lucero, the president of the graduate student and professional organization at UNLV, wrote in an e-mail.

John Filler, the chairman of the faculty senate at UNLV, said he is "proud" of the students for getting involved, but the senate is neither endorsing nor condemning their actions.

"UNLV students are some of the most significant stakeholders in this disaster," Filler wrote in an e-mail. "As future leaders of the state I am very proud of the fact that they are willing to take a public stand for UNLV. I only hope that the members of the Nevada Legislature also realize how precious this university is to the future of our state and take the affirmative action necessary save higher education."

The university's provost issued a memo noting that the walkout was scheduled but did not take a position on it.

Provost Michael Bowers said he was "proud" of student, faculty and staff support for the university.

"We also recognize that students and faculty will need to be appropriately accountable for the actions they take and we assume that both will take this into account as they decide what choices to make in regard to missing classes or excusing such absences, respectively," he wrote.

Contact reporter Richard Lake at rlake@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0307.

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Mickey D's is HIRING! wrote on February 09, 2010 11:10 PM: Raise tuition. Let the ingrates who protest and whine pay for THEIR education which they will use to enrich THEMSELVES, probably in another state. The Army will always take you slackers. If YOU were actually paying for YOUR classes you probably wouldn't have skipped them today. Eat your iphone and live in your Starbucks cup!


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Sun Citystinks wrote on February 09, 2010 08:28 PM: I agree with the comments regarding CSN what a boondoggle that place is. As for the budget I think this debacle rests jointly on the governor's shoulders and on lazy short sighted taxpayers in this state who don't want to pay their fair share. A hugh percentage of the voters are carpetbagger sun city residents who don't want to pay a penny in taxes for anything, that coupled with developers and the casino industry has truly built a house of cards in this state in terms of the tax structure. Crows are coming home to roost ... Detroit of the west ... nice ring to it eh?


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Angry Taxpayer wrote on February 09, 2010 08:24 PM: CSN should just be closed ... the only reason that school was even opened was that Richard Perkins was speaker at the time and he hooked up Henderson and some fat cat developers who were sitting on brownfield property ... sold to the state for a fat profit .. cha ching ... college out in Hendertucky ... cha ching for the businesses in the area/land prices. That institution is a 100% duplication of CCSN and UNLV its entirely redundant and a MASSIVE waste of taxpayer funds. Close it and re-route the money back to CCSN and UNLV. It won't solve all of the problems but at this point anything would help.


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Tardly Tony wrote on February 09, 2010 08:21 PM: Apparently Tony attended College before the "Cap Locks" button was added to the typucogitator ... I mean type writer ... I mean computer. Tony ... we all assume you didn't finish your first semester. Where was that? Minnesota truck drivers school?


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Nevada Jack wrote on February 09, 2010 08:18 PM: The state needs to shut down the Nevada State College out in Henderson first of all ... then at UNLV and UNR some hardcore wagon circling needs to begin. Cutting core programs or course offerings that students need to graduate will do no good and will actually have long term, lasting economic impacts for Nevada. The best course is to truly trim the fat, to get rid of the really non-essential stuff. Being a tier 1 research institution is ridiculously idiotic for any institution in Nevada ... it always has been ... it is especially so now. Expensive programs that very small numbers of students benefit from should be cut ... fluffy spending should be cut ... athletics ... unless the given sport is paying for itself ... should be cut. Harsh measures ... for harsh conditions. I doubt sanity will prevail though and I'm sure that the administration will simply take the easy way out and just make sweeping across the board cuts rather than pragmatic cuts that actually will give the Nevada taxpayer the greatest return on their investment. Idiocy and short sighted decisions are all one can expect from any state institution in Nevada.


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fight gov. moron wrote on February 09, 2010 11:31 AM: This man must be stopped.


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Time to get real wrote on February 09, 2010 10:10 AM: So these students rely on shallow, transparent and meaningless gestures to resolve issues. NICE!

Give it up kids!


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NV_System_of_Higher_Waste wrote on February 09, 2010 09:08 AM: Protest, huh? How about protesting your
  • Professors' thick foreign accents?
  • Teaching Assistants' miserable teaching skills?
  • basketball coach's $1M salary?
  • AD's $300K salary?
  • football coach's $450K salary?
  • President's $300K salary?
  • Chancellor's $335K salary?
  • jock departments like University Studies?
  • money spent on lobbying fees?
  • money spent on jobs for friends of politicians?
  • money spent on scholarships for jocks?
  • Faculty-student romances?
Hey UNR Applied Science Majors. You should ALL be getting free rides. That's the way our system was set up.

Hey Liberal arts students. You should all be paying the true cost of college. That's the way our system was set up. $800/credit sounds about right.


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TONY wrote on February 09, 2010 06:04 AM: WHEN I WAS ATTENDING UNIVERSITY
MANY YEARS AGO....I FEEL YOUR PAIN

LIFE / THE STATE DOES NOT OWE YOU
ANYTHING / FACE REALITY............
DO THE BEST YOU CAN