Napolitano reflects on UC's future in first year as president

Lyanne Melendez Image
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Janet Napolitano reflects on direction of UC system in first year as President
Janet Napolitano reflected on the direction of University of California system in first her year as president.

The president of the University of California Janet Napolitano has been in office for a year now. She sat down with ABC7 News to talk about the present state of the UC system.



Napolitano is the former Secretary of Homeland Security. During her time in that position, she knew the Islamic state in Iraq and Syria, known as ISIS, was growing rapidly.



"A growth of fundamentalist extremist Islamist groups," Napolitano said.



While the debate continues over how to destroy the Islamic State, Napolitano is firm when she says the group will be defeated.



"That requires the United States to play a leadership role. We are really the only country in the world that can do that," she said.



It has been one year since Napolitano left that position to become President of the University of California, just as the worst of the great recession was ending. No surprises, the recovery has been slow.



"So, now I have the opportunity to reset, reboot, really focus on where we take this university," Napolitano said.



One way the UC Regents dealt with the lack of proper funding by Sacramento was to increase the number of out-of state students who pay more.



"If we want to continue enrolling more California residents, where is the money coming from? We could increase tuition, or we could increase and add more out-of-state students," she said.



Napolitano says Sacramento needs to increase the state appropriation for higher education.



But Governor Brown says only if state colleges promise to keep tuition flat and agree to certain reforms.



"These are the things I'm working on: More students graduating within four years, more in-state students and those kinds of things," Napolitano added.



As for Napolitano running for higher office in California, the former Arizona governor is putting that rumor to rest.



"I am the President of the University of California. I've got the best job."


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