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HOUSE PASSES HIGHER EDUCATION BILL FREEZE TO TUITION, INCREASE LEGISLATIVE OVERSIGHT OF U of M and MnSCU SPENDING

Friday, May 17, 2013

Rep. John Persell

NEWS RELEASE

Minnesota House of Representatives

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Matt Privratsky 651-296-6860

May 17, 2013

HOUSE PASSES HIGHER EDUCATION BILL FREEZE TO TUITION, INCREASE LEGISLATIVE OVERSIGHT OF U of M and MnSCU SPENDING

ST. PAUL, MN – The House of Representatives passed the House Higher Education Conference Committee Report today on a bipartisan vote of 76-56.  Included in the bill is funding that will directly benefit students by freezing tuition at both the University of Minnesota (U of M) and the Minnesota State Colleges and University system (MnSCU). The bill also dramatically increases funding for the State Grant Program that provides education funding for low income students. State Representative John Persell (DFL – Bemidji), supports the bill.

“Our students deserve a college education that’s affordable,” said Rep. Persell. “Not just for students at Bemidji State, but also for all of our students who go to other state colleges in Minnesota.”

Last year, the legislature made record cuts to higher education in the state budget. Tuition has nearly doubled at state colleges and universities over the past decade. The bill would increase funding for higher education by $250 million, using half of those resources to freeze in-state resident tuition over the next two years. There will also be $35 million allocated to the MnDrive research program at the University of Minnesota and over $75 million allocated to the Office of Higher Education to increase grants for access, choice, and debt reduction.

“Students from all of our communities deserve a chance to find a school that’s affordable,” said Rep. Roger Erickson (DFL – Baudette). “This bill stops the trend of skyrocketing tuition and puts us back on a path of making education affordable again.”

The Higher Education bill also includes new reforms to expand the oversight function of the legislature. They are designed to better hold the U of M and MnSCU accountable for budgeting practices that have come under fire for high administrative costs and excessive compensation for top administrators.

Rep. Pelowski’s committee held fourteen hearings on the oversight needed. His committee looked at the dramatic increase in student tuition, fees, and debt over the past six years, examined student-to-faculty ratios, and scrutinized administrative costs and trends over the past decade. The product of that work can be seen in new reforms that were drafted in consultation with the Office of Legislative Auditor to expand the oversight function of the legislature to better hold the U of M and MnSCU accountable for the money they are spending.

 

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