In 2003, the 76th Texas Legislature passed House
Bill 3015 deregulating tuition of public universities. In addition, HB 3015 also requires universities to set aside 15 % of tuition to provide financial assistance for
students and lessen the effects of tuition deregulation. Another 5% is required to be set-aside to
fund the Texas B-on-Time Student Loan Program.
In all, for fiscal years 2005-2008, $248 million was set aside for
undergraduates and $48 million for graduate students. Since deregulation, the total academic
charges, including tuition and fees, for a student at a public university has
increased 72 percent. With these
increases, universities have reported a growing share of their operational
income is funded by tuition and fees for the following purposes: the use of
funds to recruit and retain faculty and staff, increase academic course offerings,
lower the student-teacher ratio, offer student services, maintain facilities,
pay utility costs, service building debt, and provide additional financial aid
to students.
When looking at data provided for before and after
deregulation, there have been drastic increases in tuition and fees, which have
only gotten worst over the years. In
2003 at the University of Texas at Austin, there was a statutory tuition (set
by the legislature) of $690 dollars and a designated tuition (set by the board
of regents) of $690 totaling into a $1,380 fee per semester. Including another $641 in fees, it cost $2,721
to attend UT in 2003 (excluding books and living costs). By 2009, statutory tuition increased to $750
and the designated tuition increased to $2,276 with a total tuition of $3, 026. Accounting for the fees, which increased only
slightly, it cost $4,468 to attend in UT in 2009. The change in tuition totaled $1,646, or 119%
between the two years while the total cost increased$1,747, or 64%. The total cost (tuition plus fees) has only
increased slightly since then: today the total cost at UT for Texas residents is
$4,915 for a 15-hour load. For
comparison, non-residents would pay $17,418 per semester. While statutory tuition is determined by the Texas
Legislature as a set amount per semester credit hour, the designated tuition is
determined by a governing board at each institution of higher education at a
level that the board considers necessary for the operation of the institution. HB 3015 eliminated the previous limits on the
governing boards to set designated tuition rates so that there is currently no
limit on the amount of tuition the university may charge. Universities argue that, because of inflation
and less money being provided by the state (an 11% decrease per student),
campuses had to raise tuition to make up for lost revenue.
As a current student at the University of Texas at Austin, I
have not seen the improvements that were supposed to result from the additional
tuition revenue. In my college, there
are few people who seem to receive financial aid, there is not an improved
student-teacher ratio, and there are not enough sections of degree-required
courses to allow you to stay on track for a four-year graduation. And there seems to be little improvement of
existing facilities, but there are new buildings being constructed. In addition, while the passage of house bill
3015 included financial assistance to be set-aside to help with the impact of
deregulation, the financial aid would not have been required if there had been
no tuition increases as a result of deregulation. While there is some financial aid available,
the increase of tuition, about 55 percent, is placing several leading
universities, including UT, out of reach for middle-income families that cannot
qualify for financial aid. Many students
and families must look for funding from other places and usually must take out
loans. By the time many students leave
college, they are stuck with more than a hundred thousand dollars of loans that
need to be paid off, with no guarantee they will have a job once they graduate,
or that even with a job, they can afford to pay off the loan. The amount student loans has now surpassed
the amount of credit-card debt in this country and many financial experts worry
that it will be a huge drain on our economy.
People spend so much paying off student loans that they cannot afford to
buy new cars or houses, which hurts those sectors and results in fewer
available jobs. With more students
attending universities and cuts to higher education funding, the current
problem at hand will continue to grow and cause even bigger issues to develop.
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