Turns out that state Sens. Jack Donahue and Conrad Appel are cleverer than they look.
The question is whether that’s enough to get Taylor Opportunity Program for
Students reform past a doubting Gov. Bobby
Jindal.
Donahue is the main author, with
Appel, of SB 48, which would lock
in TOPS awards at their academic year 2017 levels, after which the Legislature
would have to affirm increases in that rate. This means that, under the 10
percent maximum now allowed annual increase in tuition for schools that meet
performance targets and/or any future removal of legislative control over the
raising of tuition beyond this level, tuition levels at schools can increase
without the award level following suit, as now is the law. This effectively
would cap TOPS costs at the level of next year’s costs for each school or
substitute (such as a weighted average for nonpublic schools) that would vary
only by the mix of students attending what schools.
Reading the bill in isolation, it
would appear that instead of this outcome, it would create a gap between award
and tuition that the student would have to cover through other means. But the
interpretation above holds because of the way the law is written and the promulgated
code associated with it. R.S. 17:3048.1(N) states that if
insufficient money is present to fund all awards that then the Louisiana
Student Financial Assistance Commission would establish criteria that decided who
got awards, subject to the statute’s mandating usage of scores on the American
College Test and expected family contribution (a federal government formula
computed through the standards Free Application for Federal Student Aid process)
as part of that. In other words, eligible applicants either get or do not get
an award if not enough money is appropriated.
LASFAC dutifully issued such rules,
stating that in this circumstance the first batch of students not to qualify
were those who did not submit financial data. Next would come the lowest ACT
cohort, by whole numbers, subdivided by contribution starting from the highest,
by thousands of dollars. Given the statute’s language, this ordering could not
be otherwise.
However, taking all of this
together, it makes what appears to be in
isolation a bill that may save only marginally money into one that
fundamentally alters the nature of the program. The problem with TOPS always
has been that it is an entitlement program first and foremost: achieve some undemanding
standards, and the state throws free money at you to pursue college. Unfortunately,
this encourages those, by ability or temperament, marginal students who are
much more likely to lose their awards, if not flunk out of college, to attend
with this taxpayer funding that if they lose these the state never recovers
(although a minority will manage to finish degrees using other resources). As
it is, about
four-ninths lose eligibility, but the number would decrease disproportionately
in greater amounts if those with the lowest ACT scores were excluded,
accomplished by raising standards for qualification thereby making the program
less an entitlement and more like a true scholarship program.
Which, in essence, is exactly what
this bill does. Freezing TOPS funding and requiring the Legislature to vote
more for it means that if tuition goes up and the Legislature doesn’t make that
affirmation then the protocol for non-full funding kicks in that would
eliminate (after those who did not submit all the proper paperwork) the weakest
qualifiers. It even does something that opponents
of raising standards who want to reduce costs want: introduce a redistributionist
element to TOPS in that within ACT score cohorts the decision rule eliminates
recipients on the basis of resources available for schooling. The bill
simultaneously raises standards and, for its lowest qualifiers, introduces a
measure of welfarism.
In that instance, Donahue’s and
Appel’s idea (modified from an effort last
year that would have locked in the amount and then allow it to advance by
the rate of inflation) is inspired and, far from being a surface change only
dealing with TOPS’ escalating costs, fundamentally alters the nature of the
program in a mostly positive way. Passage of any of several other bills giving
institutions control over setting tuition would magnify its salutary impact
(Donahue says he only would pursue this and his bill SB 155 that
would free schools in this regard together). Best of all one would elevate
standards, but this bill as written can appeal not just to those who wish
higher standards, but also those concerned about costs and those who desire the
redistributionist element to it.
Only such a coalition may overcome
Jindal’s expressed opposition. TOPS represents one of Jindal’s few blind spots
in connecting reward to return in a sensible manner, as he has stated he wants
to keep the program in its current form that does little to encourage excellence
and prudent spending. That attitude threatens a veto of the legislation if it passes,
and if cast sets up the interesting situation of whether it can be overridden.
It will take mobilizing all of these constituencies to get this beneficial bill
into law.
TOPS is a wonderful SOCIAL PROGRAM utilized by both red and blue voting crowds. It is clear that there are not many politicians willing to tackle [down] TOPS as that would most probably mean a political suicide. However, we cannot continue funding this social program. At least not after huge tax cuts granted to those that do not need them and with billions in wasteful consulting contracts awarded to red voting lobbyists voting for small government while depending on large government. People spoke that they want fiscally responsible state. Therefore, your kids will have to go to a school that YOU [Mr. and Mrs. voter] can afford. And you know that most people can hardly afford a community college tuition... We are on a path of intellectual slavery. Politicians need uneducated crowds that will vote for flag waving, bible holding, gay bashing,... politicians. And we want to attract businesses to our state? With what?
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