“We made a commitment to (7 percent) two years ago, and put it into statute and who knew what things would be like now … none of us wanted to go there,” said Rep. Kathy Haigh, of increasing undergraduate tuition by up to 14 percent. The “up to” is the key: “As we finalize the budget we will see what the actual percent increase will be.” The bill does not specify the “up to” part, however. See the report here.
Rep. Glenn Anderson: “If we are about helping the folks that go to these institutions and there is going to be a dramatic increase in the cost of a four-year degree — a 70 percent increase in the cost of a four-year degree — there should be some give on those institutions,” he said, referring to the instructional staff to noninstructional staff ratios at public universities (2 non-instructional staff for every 1 professor/instructional staffer — compared to 1:1 in community colleges.) “Seven percent is a good figure. Anything above that is asking too much without reform.”
Rep. Mike Armstrong: “I’m going to oppose this bill … it’s about our families: It’s about middle income families sending their kids off to college… we put a 7 percent cap on this for a reason: We want to make college affordable.” “We need to think long and hard before we simply raise tuition and put the burden on middle class families.” He said the tuition increase will mean families will not be able to send their children to college.
Debate continues. Click more to read the rest. (more…)
Tags: tuition increase