Tuition expected to rise again

Sam Dunaway | News Editor

A proposed 4.03 percent increase in resident undergraduate tuition for the 2018-2019 academic year is up for approval by the Board of Trustees on April 18. This proposal follows last year’s 6.4 percent tuition increase for 2017-2018.

This tuition increase would raise undergraduate tuition from $165 per credit hour to $172 per credit hour. A 4.03 percent increase will also affect the Western Undergraduate Exchange program resulting in a proposed rate of $258 per credit hour. Both resident and non-resident graduate tuition will see a 3 percent increase.

Interim Vice President for Finance Dr. Jay Kenton created the proposal with the help of various committees. The Tuition Advisory Committee, a group of administrators, students and staff, was the key group that gave input on the tuition increase. Kenton also sought feedback from the student Senate, the graduate council, president Fuller and his cabinet and the University Budget Committee. Throughout the process, Kenton stressed the importance of student feedback in the tuition-setting process.

Along with the 4.03 percent increase, $400,000 is recommended to go toward fee remissions for students. Fee remissions are a type of institutional financial aid awarded to students that are low-income, from underrepresented populations or are first generation college students.

Although Western’s tuition is on the low side compared to other institutions, the actual amount that students pay is comparably high. Kenton explained that this is because most Oregon public universities remit close to 15 percent of their tuition, decreasing the actual amount students pay, while Western only provides 11.4 percent in fee remissions. Kenton hopes that these fee remissions help attract a diverse population of students and make obtaining a college degree more affordable and accessible.

“We, as a committee, were adamant about only approving the tuition increases if it meant that fee remissions were increased,” explained Tuition Advisory Committee member and senior Lila Gardner. “I am hopeful that $450,000-$500,000 that will be coming from that increase will help several hundred students be able to make going to college a reality.”

Junior education major Ailyn Angel was another member of  the Tuition Advisory Committee that voiced opinions on the tuition increase.

“As a student, I had a very blurry idea of where my money is going, and why it was so much for each individual,” Angel explained. “Being a part of the committee not only clarified what student money is being used for, but it also gave students an opportunity to have a say which I am extremely thankful for.”

In addition to the tuition increase, another issue going to the Board of Trustees on April 18 is whether or not to keep the Tuition Promise. The Promise ensures that a student’s tuition does not increase with annual tuition fluctuation, but students pay more for tuition in exchange for that stability. Over the past few years, Kenton found that students that chose the Tuition Promise were paying more over four years than students who chose to pay annual tuition increases.

Overall, Kenton expressed a hope that students voice opinions to the administration and the legislature to make real change happen when it comes to tuition.

“People are using their voices, they’re using the political processes that they have at their disposal to put pressure on universities to keep tuition low,” Kenton explained. “The impact that students have on this process can be profound, but you’ve got to participate.”

“I think this experience would benefit and empower all students not only because of impacting tuition rates, but also by showing the power that students hold when they come together,” Angel expressed. “I encourage all students to get involved in this process because we’re in a great university, with great people and we can make change.”

To voice opinions on the tuition proposal or the Tuition Promise, attend the Board of Trustees meeting on April 18 from 1-6 p.m. in the Columbia Room of the Werner University Center.

Contact the author at journalnews@wou.edu

Photo by: Paul F. Davis