By Caitlin Fowlkes
Fowlkes assignment 3
January 17, 2017
Newly elected West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice did not live up
to Marshall University students’ expectations Monday during his inauguration
speech. Higher education and rising tuition were not discussed. Although he did
briefly mention education, he referenced issues of public school and underpaid
teachers, but nothing related to the collegiate level.
Justice’s silence on the subject of higher education can be
concluded to mean one thing – it is not a priority. His attention is focused on
coal and financial stability, leaving higher education to the backburner. The Bluefield
Daily Telegraph, WV News Metro and multiple other news agencies have made it
clear that Justice is very close to the youth basketball teams he coaches.
Players from the teams sat in the VIP section during his speech, and Justice
even mentioned his close relationship with the children. For a man who
understands the importance of youth for the future of the state, he’s not concerned
with the future of the state’s higher educational facilities. Unfortunately for
Marshall, students shouldn’t hope for support in paying tuition like other
states this year.
The Governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, has proposed free
tuition at two and four-year public colleges to be voted on this year by New
York legislature. He hopes to enact the program for the 2016-2017 academic
year. According to a CNN article “New York governor proposes free tuition at
state colleges,” the “Excelsior Scholarship” would begin this year, making
families earning up to $100,000 eligible in the fall. The plan will increase to
$110,000 in 2018 and finally up to $125,000 in 2019. The scholarship would only
cover tuition, leaving students responsible to cover other costs such as fees,
books and dorms.
The Excelsior Scholarship is very similar to the plan Sen. Bernie
Sanders proposed during his presidential campaign. Under the “College for All
Act,” the federal government would cover 67 percent of the estimated $70
billion cost for four-year colleges for American students, according to a
summary of the proposal on the official Sanders website. The remaining 33
percent of costs would be the states’ responsibility. For states to qualify for
federal funding, they would need to meet very strict requirements, all based
around keeping educational costs low. The same legislation would decrease
student loan interest rates by half. The funding would come in part by taxing
Wall Street stock trades, bonds and derivatives. Bernie even attended Cuomo’s proposal
and backed the similar policy.
West Virginia may not be moving towards tuition-free universities
any time soon, but other parts of the country are considering it. It is a concept
that is no longer so taboo. Hopefully, more advanced cities like New York will
influence the mountain state when it comes to higher education policy and free
tuition sooner rather than later.
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