Cornell University Board of Trustees approves 1998-99 budget

The Cornell Board of Trustees unanimously approved a $1.5 billion

1998-99 spending plan for the university at its regular meeting May 23. That is 3.7 percent more than the $1.49 billion that is forecast in expenditures this year.

The budget includes a 5.8 percent increase in tuition and fees, a projected 30.2 percent net increase in investment income, an expected 16.8 percent increase in unrestricted gifts and an expected 4 percent decrease in restricted operating gifts from 1997-98.

The board also unanimously approved the following tuition schedule for the statutory colleges for 1998-99:

Undergraduate resident, $9,850, up 5.9 percent.

  • Undergraduate nonresident, $18,900, up 5.3 percent.
  • Graduate (non-veterinary), $11,500, up 6 percent.
  • DVM resident, $14,500 up 3.6 percent.
  • DVM (nonresident) $19,600, up 4.3 percent.
  • Graduate (veterinary), $12,000, up 4.3 percent.

In January the board approved a tuition increase of 4.3 percent for the endowed colleges, which set tuition at $22,780 for the 1998-99 academic year.

Professional school tuitions and other fees for 1998-99 approved by the trustees are:

  • Johnson Graduate School of Management, a 4 percent tuition increase to $24,400.
  • Cornell Law School, a 4.3 percent increase to $24,100.
  • Graduate School (endowed), a 4.3 percent increase to $22,780.
  • Undergraduate student activity fees, as recommended by the Student Assembly (after a final vote on April 23), were increased from $74 to $88.
  • Graduate and professional student activity fees, as recommended by the Student Assembly, were increased from $36 to $48.
  • Housing rates were increased by 4 percent to an average of $4,534.
  • The full-plan dining contract was increased by 6 percent to $3,021.