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Permanent residents saddled with huge upfront university fees
By Matthew Thompson, Higher Education Reporter
January 22, 2005
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Thousands of successful university applicants face a rude surprise after the Federal Government quietly axed the right of permanent residents to defer their university fees.
Instead, the Government has decreed that from January 1 permanent residents starting university must pay their charges up front - with annual HECS fees of up to $8000 for undergraduate courses and more than $10,000 a year for many postgraduate programs.
Permanent residents and New Zealand citizens had the same rights as Australian citizens to defer their university fees under the HECS and related postgraduate schemes, but under the Government's changes, which take effect this year, these rights ended.
Last year more than 33,500 permanent residents and New Zealanders were enrolled in universities across the country.
A spokeswoman for the federal Department of Education, Science and Training said permanent residents' access to loans had been removed "to close off the debt avoidance potential related to permanent residents borrowing taxpayer funds through HECS-HELP and then moving back overseas".
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AdvertisementStudents have been "made fully aware" of this policy through websites and booklets, and the change was announced as part of the wider higher education changes, the spokeswoman said.
But a distraught mother, Wendy, rang the Herald and said her 20-year-old daughter, who has lived in Australia most of her life, was in shock after discovering the system she had grown up with now excluded her.
"Many of her friends are also in the same boat; they don't know what to do," said Wendy, who did not want her family to be identified. "No one at the open days we went to in December told us this - they sent her a letter of acceptance, and then she only found out a couple of days ago that she would have to pay $13,600 up front."
The Opposition's education spokeswoman, Jenny Macklin, said "the Howard Government was forcing people who have decided to make Australia their permanent home to pay upfront fees ... they're paying more for the same thing".
The National Union of Students' state president, Sarah-Jane Collins, said permanent residents "are Australians for tax purposes, so they should be for HECS, too".
From:
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2005/01/21/1106110947910.html?oneclick=true
By Matthew Thompson, Higher Education Reporter
January 22, 2005
Page Tools
Email to a friend Printer format
Thousands of successful university applicants face a rude surprise after the Federal Government quietly axed the right of permanent residents to defer their university fees.
Instead, the Government has decreed that from January 1 permanent residents starting university must pay their charges up front - with annual HECS fees of up to $8000 for undergraduate courses and more than $10,000 a year for many postgraduate programs.
Permanent residents and New Zealand citizens had the same rights as Australian citizens to defer their university fees under the HECS and related postgraduate schemes, but under the Government's changes, which take effect this year, these rights ended.
Last year more than 33,500 permanent residents and New Zealanders were enrolled in universities across the country.
A spokeswoman for the federal Department of Education, Science and Training said permanent residents' access to loans had been removed "to close off the debt avoidance potential related to permanent residents borrowing taxpayer funds through HECS-HELP and then moving back overseas".
Advertisement
AdvertisementStudents have been "made fully aware" of this policy through websites and booklets, and the change was announced as part of the wider higher education changes, the spokeswoman said.
But a distraught mother, Wendy, rang the Herald and said her 20-year-old daughter, who has lived in Australia most of her life, was in shock after discovering the system she had grown up with now excluded her.
"Many of her friends are also in the same boat; they don't know what to do," said Wendy, who did not want her family to be identified. "No one at the open days we went to in December told us this - they sent her a letter of acceptance, and then she only found out a couple of days ago that she would have to pay $13,600 up front."
The Opposition's education spokeswoman, Jenny Macklin, said "the Howard Government was forcing people who have decided to make Australia their permanent home to pay upfront fees ... they're paying more for the same thing".
The National Union of Students' state president, Sarah-Jane Collins, said permanent residents "are Australians for tax purposes, so they should be for HECS, too".
From:
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2005/01/21/1106110947910.html?oneclick=true