Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Higher Education Committee | |
HB 1986
Brief Description: Requiring a review of tuition waivers.
Sponsors: Representatives Roberts, Buri, Kenney, Cox and Morrell.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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Hearing Date: 2/22/05
Staff: Sydney Forrester (786-7120).
Background:
The Legislature grants higher education institutions permission to reduce all or a portion of
tuition for certain types of students and for various purposes. For fiscal year 2004, institutions
reported granting $152.4 million in tuition waivers for 138,099 students.
When an institution grants a tuition waiver, the total tuition revenue collected by the institution is
reduced, but for some waivers the state assumes that state general fund dollars in the institution's
base budget make up for lost tuition revenue. When tuition revenues were deposited in the
general fund prior to 1993, it was in the state's interest to control the amount of tuition waived.
Since 1994, institutions have retained tuition revenue as a local fund and now have an incentive
to control the amount of tuition waived. With limited exceptions, tuition waivers are
"permissive" rather than mandatory. The Legislature authorizes but does not require institutions
to grant waivers.
Current waiver authority can be divided into three broad categories:
State-supported waivers: Where the institution does not directly forego revenue because the state
assumes that funding in the institution's budget makes up for the waived tuition. There is a
statutory cap for each institution on the percentage of total tuition revenue that may be waived.
For fiscal year 2004, $131 million was waived for 117,013 students. More than 25 different
state-supported waivers are authorized in statute.
Discretionary waivers: Where an institution may waive the operating fee portion of tuition for
any student for any reason. There is no cap, but foregone revenue has not been made up by the
state. These sometimes are referred to as "West Waivers" named after Senator West who
introduced the legislation creating them. For fiscal year 2004, $21 million was waived for
21,086 students. Some institutions use this authority for merit-based waivers, program-specific
waivers, and waivers for nonresident students.
Space-available waivers: Where waivers are granted to qualifying students only if the institution
determines space is available. Students attending on a space-available waiver are not counted in
the overall enrollment figures for state budgeting purposes so these waivers also are unsupported.
Recipients of space-available waivers are: low-income or unemployed persons, senior citizens,
permanent classified state employees, higher education faculty and staff of the institution,
National Guard members, and veterans of the Korean Conflict.
Summary of Bill:
The HECB will review current tuition waiver authority granted to the state's intuitions of higher
education. By December 1, 2005, the HECB will recommend to the Legislature priorities for
waivers, including repeal, consolidation, standardization, or other changes to statutes.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Not requested.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.