This week, the
    House turned
    down state Rep. Thomas Carmody’s
    HB 66,
    the companion legislation to a proposed constitutional amendment that would
    have allowed different higher education systems to set their own tuition
    rates and to delink these from Taylor Opportunity Program for Students
    awards. With the amendment, these would have allowed schools to increase
    tuition without requiring two-thirds approval of both chambers of the
    Legislature, wiping away the ability of system to increase it for each
    school as much as 10 percent a year if these individually met performance
    targets, without requiring the state to pay out more in TOPS money.
    
Enacting these
    into law and the Constitution would address a higher education delivery
    system that is overbuilt and inefficient. While alarmist rhetoric
    incessantly issues forth from higher education policy-makers and
    sympathizers inside and outside the Legislature that crisis would erupt if taxpayer
    funding levels for it this upcoming year at least do not match this year’s,
    the truth is in a comparative sense state subsidies should be more than
    adequate to meet genuine needs. If funded around last year’s level, that
    would put the state compared to its peers (plus the District of Columbia) all
    the way down to 28th
    in per capita taxpayer spending on higher education. Which is
    appropriate, being that the state’s
    personal per capita income is ranked 30th.
There are
    three interrelated reasons for the troubled fiscal condition of state
    higher education, none having to do with taxpayer effort. One, the system
    is overbuilt with too many institutions chasing too few students, diluting
    resources and weakening all of them. Louisiana ranks 8th
    in most institutions per capita and 47th in enrollments per
    public institution.
    
Second, it
    does not operate efficiently. For
    example, similarly-sized Oregon’s senior institutions get along with less
    than 10 percent of their revenues coming from the state, while the
    “doomsday” scenario decried by Louisiana higher education at the legislative
    session’s beginning, where a potential reduction of hundreds of millions of
    dollars was discussed, still contained more than twice that proportion.
    
Third, tuition
    is underpriced significantly, with the state’s average ranking for
    four-year schools only 38th (for
    two-year, it’s 28th) – not
    including the effect of TOPS that pays for roughly a fifth of full-time
    students’ fare, of whom a
    third will lose eligibility at some point. Further, the average debt
    load of a Louisiana higher education student at graduation is the 10th
    lowest in the country. Given Louisiana’s relatively higher per capita
    income, there’s clearly greater ability to pay coming from those who
    benefit by far the most from the service provided by senior institutions.
    
So the case is
    compelling for reducing the taxpayer contribution to higher education and increasing
    tuition, or passage of the bill, yet HB 66 was rejected. Then, lo and
    behold, just a day later the House Education Committee approved
    two bills almost identical in intent, SB 48
    and SB
    155 by state Sen. Jack Donahue.
    Having passed the Senate, they now head to the floor of the same House that
    just defeated HB 66.
    
But there’s
    one crucial difference between the two. In SB 155, a constitutional
    amendment, during the committee phase in the Senate an amendment was forced
    in that would take authority over admissions requirements from the Board of
    Regents and transfer it to the systems’ boards. At a philosophical level
    this simply is bad administrative practice, for the constitutional
    underpinnings of the division between the Regents overseeing the boards envisions
    the Regents setting policy while the boards managing their systems, and
    this alteration confusingly and inefficiently puts policy-making power into
    the hands of the systems.
    
However, from
    a practical standpoint, the outcome from this may be worse. This passage
    would allow systems with baccalaureate-and-above institutions to lower
    their admission standards, which the Regents recently raised because these
    were low, undoubtedly as a response to find enough students to justify the
    overbuilt status of these institutions in the state, beggaring less
    prepared and capable students from community colleges in a state already imbalanced
    with enrollments disproportionately high at senior institutions, which cost
    more money to educate. Inevitably, these students will fail and drop out at
    disproportionate rates, wasting taxpayer dollars. Worst of all, to prevent
    publicity of low retention and graduation rates, standards simply will
    fall, making Louisiana degrees less useful and attractive and compounding the
    waste. Then, in the face of worse outcomes of both non-graduates and
    graduates, the systems involved will claim they need more taxpayer dollars
    to reverse those trends when it really was a problem of their own making
    for which they ask the citizenry to compensate.
    
Thus, this
    poison pill section of SB 155 threatens to undo all the good that the rest
    of the bill promises. No doubt it wormed its way in because the votes
    otherwise weren’t there to pass the bill along, which is why HB 66 got
    sidelined but SB 155 looks like it will pass on to voters this fall. In
    sum, it makes the bill better than useless, but barely.
    
So voters may
    be left with a Hobson’s choice this fall, unless legislators make a
    stronger commitment to a quality higher education system that asks students
    to pay their fair share of the costs to educate them. Yet at this point the
    courage to do so seems lacking among a legislative majority, to taxpayers’
    detriment.
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