August 12, 2009 11:04 AM

States Cut Aid to College Students

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Struggling with budget shortfalls that reach into the billions, several states are making deep cuts in college financial aid programs, including those that provide a vital source of cash for students who most need the money.

At least a dozen states are reducing award sizes, eliminating grants and tightening eligibility guidelines because of a lack of money. At the same time, the number of students seeking aid is rising sharply as more people seek a college education and need help paying the tuition bill because they or their parents lost jobs and savings during the recession.

Many of the affected programs are need-based grants that provide money that complements financial aid offered by schools and the federal government. Without that cash, some students may be forced to drop out, transfer to cheaper schools or simply have less money available for rent and groceries. Experts fear others will take on too much debt or spend even more time working as they pursue a degree.

"There's almost no question the folks coming in are probably going to have much more difficulty getting by year to year in college and staying enrolled as a result," said Sara Goldrick-Rab, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an expert on financial aid. "The safety net is falling away."

State financial aid accounted for 12 percent of the grants awarded to college students in 2007-2008, according to the New York-based College Board. While that's a fraction of the financial aid provided to millions of students by schools, the federal government and private scholarships, the demand for aid is booming. Roughly 620,000 more students applied for federal aid in the first quarter compared with last year, a jump of more than 25 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Education.

University of Illinois senior Brandi Cho, 21, said her parents cannot afford to make up the $2,500 she expected to do without after her state grant runs out in the spring. She is considering two options: Find a second weekend job on top of the 15 hours a week she already works, or cram five senior-level accounting classes into the fall semester so she can graduate early.

"The best that I can do is just start saving every penny that I have," Cho said.

The cuts come as lawmakers and governors struggle to balance budgets crippled by the recession's impact on tax revenues. Lottery-funded merit aid programs in states such as Georgia, Florida and West Virginia are also pinched as revenues from the games are leveling off and in some cases declining.

In Illinois, a state scrambling to find $11 billion in budget savings, officials are telling 145,000 low-income students who receive the state's need-based Monetary Award Program grants to expect no help in the spring semester because money for the program will run out. Lawmakers and Gov. Pat Quinn cut the state's aid budget in half; an additional 40,000 students who rely on other state programs will be affected, too.

Ohio is eliminating grants of up to $2,496 for low-income community college students, and cutting them by more than 50 percent for low-income students at four-year universities. The state is axing $640 grants for 58,000 private school students and grants of up to $4,000 for 22,500 students attending two-year, for-profit schools.

"That's a lot of money to someone like me," said Maria Zimbardi, a 33-year-old mother of three in Youngstown, Ohio, who will not receive the nearly $3,300 grant she got last year. She is working part time as a waitress while learning administrative and accounting skills at National College, and is taking out more student loans - which now total $29,000 - so she can graduate next May.

The Wisconsin Higher Educational Aids Board projects that more than 20,000 low-income students will not receive grants because of a lack of money and a sharp increase in applicants. Jennifer Matamoros is among them, and the senior at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater - where tuition has increased about 6 percent a year in each of the past four years - is worried about paying bills without the $2,600 grant she got last year.

She said she'll likely borrow more and graduate with $30,000 in student-loan debt, which is as much as she expects to make a year in her career as an elementary school teacher. "They just keep raising more costs and taking away more money," she said.

Education Sector, a Washington-based think tank, warned in a recent study that student debt was at an all-time high, with a rising share owed to riskier private student loans. The study warned that could eventually reduce access to higher education and lead to more students defaulting on their loans.

"It's going to start to impact the equation of whether college is worth it for some students," said Erin Dillon, a policy analyst for the group.

In Michigan, where state lawmakers have yet to pass a spending plan, about 96,000 students don't yet know the value of their Promise scholarships - or if they get one at all. The state's Republican-controlled Senate voted to eliminate the $140 million program that provides high school graduates with up to $4,000, but Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm has vowed to restore some of money.

Financial aid officials in other states are making difficult choices with the limited funds they have. In Massachusetts, where the state financial aid budget was cut 10 percent, the Office of Student Financial Assistance plans to make deep cuts to other aid programs to preserve the need-based Mass Grants program. Even so, many grants could fall by $400 to $500 compared with last year.

Wisconsin decided to slightly increase the average grant awards because students are showing much greater need, said Connie Hutchison, the executive secretary of the Wisconsin Higher Educational Aids Board. That meant university students who applied in July for aid are learning the pool of money has run out.

"We're getting a lot of questions about why students are not getting financial aid they got last year," Hutchison said. "It's so hard to explain to them."

AP
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by tautomer August 13, 2009 1:46 AM EDT
Wonder how many of the kids complaining above voted for Obama. All I can say is "You Asked For It, You Got It....Obama!!! They wanted "Change to be specified later" and this is that Change. Why don't they embrace it?

Sandra was going to be a Doctor, but Obama changed that. Now she'll be a secretary. Obama..Change You Can Deceive With!!!!
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by mary-miami August 12, 2009 5:52 PM EDT
University should be free to all American citizens no matter what age they are when they enroll. If a person is doing well in their classes and passing all the tests, their education should be free. In Europe most people have the opportunity to study careers, here in the U.S. many intelligent people are left without the chance to further their education because of no money.

www.marymiami.wordpress.com
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by tautomer August 13, 2009 1:59 AM EDT
Funny thing, we put $5/day, ~$150/month into an account starting when the kids were born. The we averaged right around $60,000 in each account when the kids turned 18. We took the money out and placed it in money market funds when the Democrats took over in 2007. We got a nice bonus when one of the kids got a sizeable athletic scholarship. We haven;t had problems with tuition. I wonder how many of these kids parent thought to put away that little $5/day. Or are they just whining now because they didn't prepare?
by babooph August 12, 2009 5:03 PM EDT
No jobs to get the $,so soon only the rich ,with their still massive tax cuts will be educated -welcome to the new FEUDALISM.
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by tautomer August 13, 2009 1:47 AM EDT
You asked for it, you got it..Obama!!!!
by Yes_ABWH_Fan August 12, 2009 2:04 PM EDT
The colleges themselves need to cool their heals on costs. Nearly every college I know of has constant construction-programs going on, while 'American' enrollment keeps dropping. Colleges need a huge dose of "reality-based education" and must start dovetailing courses-taught a LOT closer to what societal needs actually are. They also need outcome-based measurement & reward systems, that demand proof-of-costs at all levels of one's education, and truth-tabled data to back up job-placement claims & salaries, and educational efficacy.
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by coloradojesse August 12, 2009 1:50 PM EDT
I have several cousins that received grants , workstudy and scholarships went to a couple years college then dropped out. Almost all of them did not have the grades to continue. Now one of them is back in a different college with a different major and receiving the grants and workstudy again. She had flunked out of the first college. They were not prepared for college after they graduated HS. There are other kids out there that want to go and are not getting help. The amount of financial aid wasted for these that dropped out of college could have put other kids in college. Not everyone is college material maybe vocational ed or trade school instead. They do not have to pay none of it back and they have lost nothing . But the taxpayers have. The system is all wrong. Help the students but if they don't finish college they pay it back so another kid can go.
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by vrick_silvah August 12, 2009 12:32 PM EDT
I'll tell you where the bulk of the problem is. It's colleges and there stupid committees that decides on the tuition prices students should pay every year. These jerks keep raising the tuition fee while the states keeps taking out grant money or financial aid to students who needs it more. You would think these states would have common sence in ending other programs that they don't need, but im sure cutting financial aid and depriving college students of getting a degree has just gotten harder if it hasn't already thanks to the republibrats. This whole thing started because our previous president and his goons concetrated on IRAQ for 10 years instead of america. They had forgotten that they were chosen to be president and figures of this country and not IRQa. In the meantime, things got from good to bad, to worse in america. But the republicans didn't care about what happens or happened in american because they were busy governing iraq and its people. So while Iraq is now secure, the U.S got caight in a depression, and more things like this to follow. Ridiculous. I prediction more kids dropping out or going to college because of this type of stuff thats going on. They simple can't afford college when the colleges charges an arm and a leg.
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by dragyn30 August 12, 2009 11:48 AM EDT
What is really sad, is a kid coming from another country gets a free ride or significantly reduced tuition, while kids who lives in the USA and will most like try to find a job in the USA are left to pay their own way!!!

I was lucky my daughter got grants and scholarships, but we still have to pay more than $9000 for her per semester. I have over $40K in loans to complete my bachelors in 2006, education costs are high, but it can take a long time to realize the benefits. The job market is tough without a 4-year degree, many jobs are out of reach!

It is time we started taking care of our own kids rather that others, they will take what they learned back to their country and we get left paying the check.
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by docpeter1953 August 12, 2009 12:12 PM EDT
The job market is tough without a 4-year degree, many jobs are out of reach!
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A four year degree isn't much better than a HS diploma. Better start looking at least at a Master's or Doctoral like they do in China and other foreign countries.
by ibsteve2u August 12, 2009 11:31 AM EDT
Ah, the joys of a Republican economy, post-offshoring and post-trickle down.

A wonderful future awaits, eh?
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by docpeter1953 August 12, 2009 10:44 AM EDT
She sure looks happy for a person who found out they will not be able to get the $$ to go to college.

Maybe the prospect of higher education was standing in her way.
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by sandy19731 August 12, 2009 11:07 AM EDT
I hope more students will consider Community Colleges for the first two years of college. And look at technical career training also offered at these colleges. It's too bad there is less money for these students, this country needs an educated populace if we are to compete with the rest of the world and advance as a people.
by the_majesty August 12, 2009 11:57 AM EDT
For the people that voted for Obama.
-----OBAMA STRIKES AGAIN---------
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