Govt backflip a win for students
02 December 2015
Media
Release: New Zealand Union of Students’
Associations
The national student union says Steven
Joyce’s overdue decision to lift the cap for the number of
years students are eligible for loans for some undergraduate
programmes is an important win for students.
Now students studying medicine, optometry, dentistry and veterinary science can borrow an extra year for course fees and living costs.
NZUSA President Rory McCourt says the decision is a victory not only for the New Zealand Medical Students’ Association (NZMSA), but also for the national student union NZUSA, the New Zealand Vet Students’ Association and the Young Nats, who all kept the issue alive and put pressure on the Government.
“Hundreds of students at Auckland, Otago and Massey Universities in medicine, dentistry and vet science will be very relieved to hear the Government has seen sense.”
The decision comes off the back of a petition calling for a change, signed by over 20,000 New Zealanders.
“NZUSA supported the petition and advocated for a National Importance category so that other like-programmes could be exempted from the miserly 7 year cap.” says McCourt.
Mr McCourt singles out recent NZMSA President Elizabeth Berryman’s “tireless advocacy" as essential to keeping medical students front-and-centre of the debate in the last year.
“This change has come after five years of student groups lobbying and of showing Minister Joyce the evidence. But in the end it was public action and constant media that pushed him. He was adamantly opposed to this change five minutes ago and now he’s all for it.”
“Let’s not pretend Joyce was doing any real monitoring of the impact of this policy. His ‘it’s about right’ attitude means ignoring the impact of postgrad allowance cuts, ballooning student debt and eroding equality of opportunity for as long as possible, until these issues face him on the evening news and they can't be ignored any longer.”
“The lesson here is that students need to organise if we want to see a change in policy from this Government -our arguments are not enough.”'
ENDS