Daniel Ong
Education: Currently a non-traditional student at CU-Boulder in electrical engineering. Also attended CU-Denver, University of Northern Colorado (Frontiers of Science Institute), Arapahoe Community College and Boulder Vo-Tech (Electronics Technician Certificate).
Job: Electronics and engineering technician
CANDIDATE - University of Colorado Regent - AT Large
Bio:
Effects on Athletics:
Response to Allbuffs Question and Answer:
Quotes regarding athletics: From the Daily Camera

Education: Currently a non-traditional student at CU-Boulder in electrical engineering. Also attended CU-Denver, University of Northern Colorado (Frontiers of Science Institute), Arapahoe Community College and Boulder Vo-Tech (Electronics Technician Certificate).
Job: Electronics and engineering technician
CANDIDATE - University of Colorado Regent - AT Large
Bio:
Effects on Athletics:
Response to Allbuffs Question and Answer:
Quotes regarding athletics: From the Daily Camera
What would your top priorities be as regent? Eliminate discrimination against part-time and summer students in tuition, fees and policies. Currently they are charged almost twice as much per credit hour as some full-time fall/spring students, even though it takes the same credit hours to graduate. Part-time and summer students usually have family, employment or financial commitments or disabilities that prevent them from becoming full-time students. CU-Boulder is especially bad. The administration proposed a small step toward addressing this inequity this spring but virtually the entire Board of Regents rejected it. A majority of regents, including Stephen Ludwig and the other Democrats, have voted to support policies that would give most undocumented students lower tuition per credit hour than most part-time and summer students. Repeal the UCB Student Athletic Fee, a tax on students and a direct subsidy to the Athletic Department. This was imposed by the regents decades ago for a previous financial crisis. Once the switch to the Pac-12 is completed, CUAD will receive an additional $10 million annually, making the fee obsolete.