Campus News

Senior Slugs pay it forward with student-to-student philanthropy project

This year, 21 UCSC seniors are asking classmates to help fellow undergraduates pay for their education. Council members hope to inspire 15 percent of their class to contribute, and expect to raise about $10,000 for the Class of 2012.

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UC Santa Cruz students have a long history of digging into their wallets to sidestep bureaucracy, fund initiatives, and take action, even during economic slumps.

In the past few years they preserved McHenry Library’s operating hours when threatened with reduction, paid for environmentally friendly building materials at the campus health center, and instituted a carbon fund to reduce UCSC’s environmental impact.

Now, 21 seniors are asking classmates to help fellow undergraduates pay for their education.

Members of Class Council 2011 are asking students in their graduating class to contribute $20.11 each. Council members hope to inspire 15 percent of the class to contribute, and expect to raise about $10,000. The council will give the money to the Class of 2012 to distribute in scholarships.

Scholarship contenders must submit essays about the importance of “spirit, legacy, unity, and giving.” Not coincidentally, the first letters of those four words spell “SLUG,” a reference to UCSC’s banana slug mascot, which turns 25 this year.

The first round of scholarships is modest–$500 each. But even that is significant, said Brittany Arvizu, 23 (Oakes, marine biology). “That much money can pay for books for a quarter of study,”  Arvizu said. “For students with jobs, it could mean one less day of work every week. It might not seem like a lot of money but it makes a big difference.”

A student-to-student philanthropy project may sound counterintuitive and risky during these uncertain budget times. The University of California faces cutbacks amounting to a half-billion dollars. But the group insists budget cuts and concerns about student access to education add urgency to their campaign.