Vindicator Logo

Board to vote on 6% tuition raise

By Harold Gwin

Saturday, November 26, 2005


Student leaders said they were warned in September that tuition would rise to cover staff pay raises.
By HAROLD GWIN
VINDICATOR EDUCATION WRITER
YOUNGSTOWN -- Youngstown State University is looking at a 6 percent increase in tuition next fall.
The Finance and Facilities Committee of the YSU Board of Trustees is scheduled to vote on a resolution approving the increase at a meeting Thursday. The proposal also includes a 3.3 percent room and board increase.
A recommendation made by the committee would go to the full board for consideration at its Dec. 14 meeting.
If approved, it would be the university's ninth consecutive annual tuition increase.
A proposed rise in tuition shouldn't have come as a surprise. YSU student leaders said they were told by administration officials in September that further annual tuition increases would be needed to pay for employee wage increases in new three-year contracts negotiated in August.
Raises in contracts
YSU's 380 faculty members are getting annual increases of 3 percent this year and 3.5 percent in the second and third years of their contract. The university's 400-member Association of Classified Employees is getting 3 percent annual increases in each of the first two years and 3.25 percent in the third year of their agreement.
Under the proposal, annual tuition (which includes an instructional fee, a general fee and a technology fee) for undergraduate Ohio residents would rise by $380 to $6,713, while regional nonresident undergraduates would see tuition rise by $524 to $9,329.
Nonregional, nonresident undergraduate tuition would rise by $692 to $12,233.
Graduate students would see a 6 percent increase as well. For Ohio residents, graduate tuition would increase by $468 to $8,233 a year. Regional nonresident graduate students would see their cost rise by $636 to $11,281, and nonregional nonresidents would have to pay an additional $804 for a total of $14,113.
Room and board charges are scheduled to rise by $210 to $6,490.
Revenue source
The tuition increases are expected to generate an additional $3.8 million in revenue for the university, based on a projected fall 2006 full-time equivalent enrollment of 10,220 students.
That's 112 fewer full-time equivalents than are enrolled right now, though the university isn't actually predicting an enrollment decrease but is being conservative for budgeting purposes.
YSU is projecting an $800,000 drop in state aid next school year, a decline of about 2 percent. A continual decline in state aid has been cited by the university in the past as one reason tuition rates keep rising.