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Tuition at 14 state-owned universities to jump nearly three percent next year

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Outside the board of governors meeting, a small group of students rallied for, among other things, free higher education. (Katie Meyer/WITF)

 

(Harrisburg) — The price of being a student in the State System of Higher Education is getting steeper.

Citing rising costs, the system’s board of governors has voted to hike tuition next year. The 2.99 percent bump will push PASSHE’s annual in-state base tuition up $224.

Kenn Marshall, a spokesman for the school system, said it’s no one’s ideal solution.

But PASSHE is facing a nearly $50 million dollar deficit. And while the state has increased its funding for higher education, Marshall said it’s just not enough.

“Ove the last four years our state funding has increased by about $55 million. Our pension cost increases alone have been $65 million over that time,” he said. “The increases that we’ve received in state funding have not even covered our pension cost increases.”

The state’s funding level for the PASSHE system is essentially the same as it was before the Great Recession.

The three state legislators at the meeting voted against the hike–with Democrats Judy Schwank and Mike Hanna saying they’d support smaller hikes, and Republican Mike Turzai holding fast to a flat rate.

PASSHE’s financial woes have been discussed at length in Harrisburg–and lawmakers have proposed various drastic changes, including shuttering one of the 14 schools or consolidating them under larger state-related universities like Penn State.

Marshall said the system is against major structural changes.

“The state system as it’s constituted with the 14 universities is appropriate,” he said. “We will continue to operate just looking for ways to make sure those 14 universities are sustainable, and are best serving the students in the commonwealth.”

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