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Documents
University of Wisconsin Academic Staff Assembly Document #318
Madison May 12, 2003
Resolution in support of the protest by international students against
the discriminatory imposition of a surveillance fee on foreign students
and foreign exchange visitors
Submitted by Representative F. Simon Anderson
The following resolution aims at providing support by the UW-Madison
Academic Staff for the opposition voiced by international students toward
the discriminatory imposition of a 'surveillance' fee ONLY on the foreign
students being tracked. This tracking is occurring under a federally-mandated,
but unfunded, Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS)
tracking system. The UW educational institution is based on a nondiscriminatory,
inclusive, system of governance and cost recovery procedures, and the
imposition of this fee on a minority group, with supposed benefits to
the entire community, contradicts this. Opposition to this method of cost
recovery has been voiced by many foreign student groups on campus, and
many UW-Madison departments. We believe that the UW-Madison Academic Staff
Assembly should go on record to protest this discriminatory fee imposition,
and in support of the foreign students and foreign exchange scholars who
provide many significant contributions to the university.
Resolution in support of the protest by international students against
the discriminatory imposition of a surveillance fee on foreign students
and foreign exchange visitors.
Whereas, The UW-Madison has a commitment to diversity, non-discrimination
and equality;
Whereas, The federally-mandated Student and Exchange Visitor Information
System (SEVIS) mandates tracking of all foreign students and exchange
scholars by the University System, but is not being funded by the federal
government;
Whereas, The SEVIS system is not provided as a service to the foreign
students, but as a service to ALL living in the US under the Homeland
Security legislation; and
Whereas, It is recognized that the UW-Madison needs to fund the continuing
costs of the SEVIS system. Therefore, be it
RESOLVED that the Academic Staff Assembly of the University of Wisconsin-Madison
urges the University administration to reconsider its proposed fee imposition
on international students in favor of a more equitable means of funding
the federally mandated, but unfunded, Student and Exchange Visitor Information
System.
SEVIS: fee imposition background and activities
SEVIS, Student and Exchange Visitor Information System, is a new electronic
tracking system mandated by the Federal Government, but not funded by
that same institution. The main purpose of the system is monitoring foreign
students and foreign exchange visitors for the purpose of homeland security.
Its purported goal of "helping stop terrorism" is designed to
be of benefit to all US residents. Yet the UW administration has just
announced (April 2003) that a fee of $50 per semester ($25 for summer)
will be imposed on foreign students at the UW, and ONLY on foreign students;
a discriminatory fee imposition imposed without consultation with the
UW student body, the Academic Staff Assembly or the Faculty Senate, and
especially without discussion with foreign student groups on campus.
Protests on this fee imposition have been voiced in the Madison newspapers;
"Making foreign students pay for tracking unfair, unwise," an
editorial piece in The Capital Times, Tuesday 22 April, 2003. It has been
protested to the UW administration by many foreign student associations
on campus; Africa without Borders Org., African Students Assoc., Armenian
Students Assoc., Brazilian Assoc., Caribbean Assoc of Madison, Chinese
Students and Scholars Assoc., etc.; 22 organizations as of 4/26/03. Many
UW departments have also voiced opposition, including Accounting, Agricultural
and Applied Economics, Astronomy, Economics, Forestry, etc.; 17 departments
as of 4/26/03.
And a flurry of emails have been generated to try to gather support,
protesting the surveillance fee imposition, on the grounds of discrimination,
undermining the UW's commitment to diversity, violation of shared governance
policies requiring participatory meetings on such fee impositions, and
basically as being a fee imposed on a minority group for supposed services
to that minority group, as compared to handicap access where all pay for
such a service, but only a few need the service, and other shared-cost
services provided by the UW to minority groups.
The UW administration has taken the attitude that the fee imposition
could not be reviewed because it is "administratively complicated
to change it." It is being termed a "service" to foreign
students, for which they alone must pay. That the data gathering is deemed
a "service" to foreign students ONLY is being disputed, and
that the fee should be shouldered ONLY by the foreign students is also
under question. The method of implementation, by automatic inclusion as
part if the tuition bill sent to each foreign student, means that there
is not a sensible way for them to protest the fee imposition once it has
happened. It engenders fear of not being able to continue studies at the
UW with the possibility of withheld transcripts, and precludes sensible
debate and protest at that stage!
Reevaluation of the method of funding the continued operation of the
SEVIS system needs to be debated, options examined, and a fair and equitable
financial structure put in place.
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