Stony Brook University has reversed its controversial decision to charge its new $37.50 Academic Excellence and Success fee for the Fall semester.

A message sent to Stony Brook students through SOLAR on Thursday said that the fee, which would be applied to students’ tuition bills beginning with the current semester, “will help bring the university much-needed resources to strengthen our academic programs in many ways, including improving the student-faculty ratio, providing timely access to classes needed for graduation, and creating new opportunities for students to work directly with some of the very best professors in the nation.”

The announcement that the university would apply the charge to students’ Fall semester tuition, which took place only a week before the close of the semester, seems to have either been a mistake or a decision that the university regretted upon receiving student complaints. This post will be updated when the university becomes available for comment.

Undergraduate Student Government President Mark Maloof took issue with the fee being charged for the Fall semester, though he did not oppose the fee itself.

“The Fall semester is over and students will not be able to take advantage of what the Fall Fee would have provided,” Maloof said in an e-mail. “The students are retroactively paying but cannot retroactively receive the benefits.”

The contents of the message announcing the retraction of the original version of the policy, which is available on SOLAR, are posted below.