

With the absence of the STF, there will be an increased difficulty in funding the hackathon next semester. The STF previously offered grants in three cycles per year to student technology organizations, which will no longer be distributed.Ĭal Hacks is a student organization focused on hacking that received approximately $10,000 from the STF in previous years to fund its annual “hackathon,” according to campus sophomore and executive director Terrance Li.
Berkeley adobe creative cloud software#
In addition to service reductions and software outages, the absence of the STF will result in “wide-ranging consequences” for campus student organizations, according to McNulty. “Without the STF, these software programs will no longer be supported,” McNulty said in an email. McNulty said during the 2019-20 academic year, for example, 57% of students used at least one of these software and one in five students used two or more, according to data from Productivity and Collaboration Services, a campus IT department. All students will lose access to Adobe Creative Cloud in July and Microsoft Office in September, and some will lose access to MATLAB in December, which will impact a significant number of students who have previously utilized these software. McNulty noted that several software outages will occur as well. Financially vulnerable students will be most affected by service reductions at the OCF, with many unable to afford software licensing costs, private technology support and access to hardware and equipment. McNulty added that service reductions are “inevitable,” noting that the Student Tech Services Helpdesk and Open Computing Facility, or OCF, will have to reduce their services and operating hours next semester.

The lack of the STF in the upcoming academic year will impact the services that have been provided since it was last approved in 2014, according to Jennifer McNulty, analyst for the Student Technology Fund. The AAVP’s office, which was not involved with the STF, is working to minimize service outages and communicate that technology services should be funded by campus, not students. Weichert, who is also the incoming Academic Affairs Vice President, added that the low voter turnout indicated that not enough students were aware that they would lose technology services without the STF, potentially due to the assumption that those services are covered by campus. “Even though we had nearly 8,000 students voting in favor of the fee, it would’ve had to be paid for by 40,000 that didn’t voice their opinion on it if it did pass.” “It is a deliberate part of the policy that ensures that a small portion of the campus is not able to levy a fee against all students,” Weichert said. The total percentage of “yes” or “no” votes for the STF was 19.1%, which did not meet the threshold and resulted in its failure to renew, Weichert added. The campus policy states that only “yes” or “no” votes on a referendum are counted when determining if the threshold is met, which excludes votes made in abstention. The results of the 2021 ASUC Elections for all referendums were initially certified by the ASUC Elections Council on April 19, with the STF receiving a majority of votes in favor of its renewal, according to Weichert.ĭespite the STF obtaining a majority vote, it failed to meet a campus policy that requires a minimum voter threshold of 20% of all enrolled and eligible students to be met for a referendum to pass, Weichert said. UC Berkeley Student Fee Referenda Committee co-chair James Weichert, who was also formerly ASUC Elections Council chair, said the STF failed due to a “nuanced situation” with regard to campus-based student fee referendums. “It’s unfortunate that the fund didn’t get renewed, especially because I personally and a lot of my peers have been able to continue school and handle a virtual transition because of it.” “The fund really made success it gave everyone equal opportunity and removed technology from being a barrier to excelling in school,” Lien said. Without the STF fee - a campus-based student fee referendum that provided all UC Berkeley students with equitable access to a range of technology services - Lien said he will no longer have access to a Wi-Fi hot spot and laptop that he relied on to take virtual classes during the pandemic, which was lent to him by Moffitt Library. For Kenneth Lien, campus sophomore and executive director of Cal Hacks, the failed renewal of the Student Technology Fund, or STF, fee during the ASUC elections in April is a “loss of a safety net.”
