HOUSE BILL REPORT
SHB 1174
As Amended by the Senate
Title: An act relating to tuition waivers at institutions of higher education.
Brief Description: Changing veterans' tuition waiver provisions.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Higher Education (originally sponsored by Representatives McCoy, Campbell, Morrell, Chase, Condotta, Hunt, Appleton, Hudgins, Armstrong, Hinkle, Conway, Lantz, Ormsby, Haigh and Upthegrove).
Brief History:
Higher Education: 2/3/05, 2/11/05 [DPS].
Floor Activity:
Passed House: 3/4/05, 96-0.
Senate Amended.
Passed Senate: 4/13/05, 44-0.
Brief Summary of Substitute Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON HIGHER EDUCATION
Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 13 members: Representatives Kenney, Chair; Sells, Vice Chair; Cox, Ranking Minority Member; Rodne, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Buri, Dunn, Fromhold, Hasegawa, Jarrett, Ormsby, Priest, Roberts and Sommers.
Staff: Sydney Forrester (786-7120).
Background:
Within certain limits, institutions may waive all or a portion of tuition and fees for eligible
students. For these waivers, known as state-supported waivers, it is assumed moneys in the
institutions' budgets will offset the tuition not collected from students as a result of granting
the waivers. This authority to grant state-supported waivers is capped for each institution at a
certain percentage of the total tuition revenue the institution collects. Within their respective
percentage caps, each institution decides how to apportion its waiver authority among the
various categories of state-supported permissive waivers. Institutions also have authority to
waive tuition on a space-available basis for certain eligible persons. Student attendance
under space-available waivers is not counted for budgetary purposes. In addition to
state-supported waivers and space-available waivers, institutions also have authority to waive
all or a portion of the tuition operating fee (not the building fee) for any student.
Veteran-Related State-Supported Waiver Authority: State-supported permissive waiver
authority includes the authority to waive all or a portion of tuition and fees for certain
veterans. Three separate statutes currently provide permissive state-supported tuition waiver
authority for veterans. One statute provides a waiver for children of veterans listed as
missing in action or a prisoner of war.
Veteran-Related Space-Available Waiver Authority: A veteran of the Korean Conflict is eligible for a waiver of all or a portion of tuition and fees. For purposes of the waiver, a veteran of the Korean Conflict means anyone who served on active duty in the armed forces of the United States during any portion of the period beginning June 27, 1950, and ending January 31, 1955.
Summary of Substitute Bill:
Tuition waiver authority for all veterans is incorporated into one chapter and the various
separate statutes are repealed. State-supported waiver authority is expanded to include the
children and spouse, or surviving children and spouse, of eligible veterans and National
Guard members.
Eligible Veterans and National Guard Members: Eligible veterans and National Guard
members include Washington residents who are or were active duty or reserve military
members or National Guard members called to active federal service in a war or conflict
fought on foreign soil or in international waters or in support of those serving on foreign soil
or in international waters. Veterans and National Guard members who have been discharged
from service must have received an honorable discharge in order to be eligible for a waiver.
Permissive Waivers: Within state-supported waiver authority, institutions of higher
education may waive all or a portion of tuition and fees for:
Institutions of higher education also may waive all or a portion of tuition and fees for a
military or naval veteran who did not serve in active federal service abroad or in support of
those serving abroad and who does not qualify as an eligible veteran or National Guard
member. For these waivers, however, no State General Fund support is assumed.
Private vocational schools and institutions of higher education are encouraged to provide
waivers consistent with those provided by the public institutions.
EFFECT OF SENATE AMENDMENT(S):
Makes technical corrections.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: (In support) This bill honors all our military personnel. Those who are in
the National Guard have no choice but to serve in active duty when ordered to do so. We
should honor all members of the military when they return. We all remember what happened
after the Vietnam War and I don't want to see that happen again.
We can't send the message that our veterans are collateral damage. Reserve military and
National Guard are taken from high-paying jobs to serve in low-paying jobs and their
families suffer economically as well. This bill consolidates all the veterans' waivers in one
place and includes merchant mariners and submariners where those groups have been
previously left out of other statutes. There will be a friendly amendment which I support.
(In support with changes) There are four or five different statutes that apply to different
veteran categories and various tuition waivers are applied. This bill provides the higher
education institution the opportunity to take a single look at veterans and apply a waiver
standard to all veterans regardless of when or where they served. We have some suggestions
for changes that would improve the bill and have communicated them with the sponsor and
staff. The institutions are deeply committed to our veterans even when it comes out of our
base budget, but it is important to understand that when the waiver cap was created back in
1992, these waivers were never indexed to tuition. We have more than doubled tuition since
then, and as a result we are waiving significantly more tuition dollars today.
Testimony Against: None.
Persons Testifying: (In support) Representative McCoy, prime sponsor.
(In support with changes) Chris Reykdal, State Board for Community and Technical
Colleges.