Minnesota State May Raise Tuition by 3.4 Percent
This is bad news for the students. Couldn’t the school find something to cut?
The Star Tribune reports.
Minnesota state university students may see 3.4 percent tuition hike
Students at Minnesota’s seven state universities would pay an average of $233 more in tuition starting this fall — 3.4 percent more than last year — under a proposal released Monday by the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities (MnSCU) system.
The proposal, which would boost average tuition to $7,016 a year, would be the first tuition hike since 2012 at the system’s four-year universities.
But students heading to Minnesota’s two-year public colleges will be spared any tuition hike this fall. This spring, state lawmakers mandated a tuition freeze at the 24 community and technical colleges, which means that full-time students will pay an average of $4,816 a year for the fourth year in a row.
The board of trustees is expected to take up the proposal this week.
The University of Minnesota, which operates separately, is considering a 1.5 percent increase in tuition for state residents, and a 7 to 10 percent increase for nonresidents.
Officials at both the U and MnSCU had sought an increase in state funds to freeze tuition for Minnesota residents for two years, much as the Legislature agreed to do in 2013.
Minnesota state university students may see 3.4 percent tuition hike (The Star Tribune)