Tuition Increases Approved
Tuition Increases Approved Save Email Print
Posted: 5:57 PM May 9, 2008
Last Updated: 5:57 PM May 9, 2008

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FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - Kentucky's community colleges may have
thousands fewer available slots next year, after a state panel on
Friday rejected a proposed double-digit tuition increase for them,
the system's president said.
As many as 6,000 fewer students may find themselves without
access to the Kentucky Community and Technical College System,
President Michael McCall said. Reductions in state funding, and a
smaller than requested tuition hike are to blame, McCall said.
"It's counterintuitive," McCall said of the Kentucky Council
on Postsecondary Education's decision. "What they have chosen to
do today is affordability in the name of accessibility. They have
sacrificed accessibility for affordability."
Kentucky's public universities have been grappling with
increasing costs and decreasing state funds. The state is facing a
$900 million revenue shortfall over the next two fiscal years
beginning July 1.
State lawmakers last month approved a two-year $19 billion state
spending plan that included an overall 3 percent cut in state
funding to Kentucky's public universities. The schools responded
with proposed tuition hikes ranging from about 6 percent to about
13 percent.
The higher education council on Friday approved tuition
increases ranging from about 6 percent to nearly 10 percent.
Council members approved 9 percent tuition hikes at the
University of Louisville and the University of Kentucky, and a 9.7
percent jump at Northern Kentucky University. The council also
approved increases of 7.4 percent at Morehead State University and
6.1 percent at Murray State University.
Tuition hikes at Kentucky State University, Eastern Kentucky
University, Western Kentucky University and the community colleges
were approved, but lower than what the schools were asking.
KSU and EKU will both raise their tuition by 7 percent instead
of the 8 percent they were seeking, under the council's decision.
Western Kentucky was authorized for an 8 percent boost, compared to
the 9 percent it was seeking, but was given authority to raise
tuition for out of state students by more than 13 percent.
Community colleges were seeking a raise of about 13 percent, but
the council approved a 5.2 percent jump.
McCall said the move would likely force layoffs and cause
officials to curtail enrollment, which is now at about 92,000
people. McCall said the smaller tuition hike will likely lead to
cuts in services and elsewhere.
"It certainly will not be anywhere near 92,000," McCall said
of enrollment at Kentucky's community colleges next year.
WKU President Gary Ransdell said the permission to increase out
of state rates should help offset the lower tuition hike for
Kentucky residents. Otherwise, the school was facing the prospect
of having to cut another $962,000 from its budget, Ransdell said.
"We have a quality program and I think out-of-state students
will continue to be attracted to a quality institution," Ransdell
said. "So, I think this is a compromise within which we can
work."

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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