FINAL BILL REPORT
SB 5926
C 272 L 05
Synopsis as Enacted
Brief Description: Modifying provisions in the advanced college tuition payment program.
Sponsors: Senators McAuliffe, Schmidt, Pridemore, Kohl-Welles, Rockefeller, Shin and Schoesler; by request of Committee on Advanced College Tuition Payment.
Senate Committee on Early Learning, K-12 & Higher Education
House Committee on Higher Education
Background: The Guaranteed Education Tuition (GET) Program was created in 1998 as
Washington's prepaid college tuition program. The GET Program allows families to purchase
tuition units at current prices for use at a later date. These funds are invested by the State
Investment Board and the purchaser is guaranteed that one year's worth of units purchased now
will be worth one year's worth of public university tuition in the future.
Customers can purchase up to 500 units and then redeem them at any accredited public or private
college or university in the country. The Committee on Advanced College Tuition Payment (or
GET Committee) oversees the program, including regularly setting and revising the purchase
price for a tuition unit to ensure an actuarially sound program.
Anyone can purchase a GET unit, but the designated beneficiary must be a resident of
Washington at the time the unit is purchased. Assets in an individual's or family's GET account
are not protected from creditors in a bankruptcy proceeding.
Under the statute, the purchase price of a unit is to be based on a weighted average of tuition and
fees, adjusted to ensure actuarial soundness. From the beginning of the program, the purchase
price and the annual payout amount have been adjusted to equal the highest tuition and fees for
a resident undergraduate student at a Washington public university. However, there are certain
circumstances where refunds are required to be based on the weighted average tuition, which is
a lesser amount.
Payouts for an academic year are required to be based on the state's fiscal year which runs from
July 1 to June 30. A typical academic year runs from August 1 to July 31.
The tuition and fees that form the basis of a tuition unit under the GET program include service
and activity fees. The Legislature has retained authority to set resident undergraduate tuition rates,
which protects the state from unanticipated obligations under the GET program. Regular service
and activity fees are not set by the legislature, but under current law these fees may not increase
faster than the rate of increase in tuition. However, any portion of service and activity fees that
is to pay for bonded debt on capital facilities projects is exempt from legislative control on its
amount or rate of increase. When student centers or recreational facilities are built using service
and activity fees, the impact can be between $100 and $400 per student in additional annual fees.
Summary: The requirement that the named beneficiary under the GET Program be a resident
of Washington is removed. The intent of the GET Program is to help citizens in Washington, but
the program's governing committee may determine residency requirements for eligible purchasers
and beneficiaries to maintain the actuarial soundness of the program.
Tuition units purchased more than two years before the filing of bankruptcy proceedings or a
bankruptcy judgment are excluded from consideration as personal assets.
The concept of weighted average tuition is removed from the GET Program statutes. Refunds
payable if the program is terminated or if a beneficiary chooses not to attend college are based on
the current value of tuition and fees, as determined by the program's governing committee .
An academic year for purposes of the GET Program is redefined as August 1 through July 31,
rather than July 1 through June 30.
Under the GET Program, "tuition and fees" does not include service and activity fees charged
now or in the future for the payment of bonds or other indebtedness for acquiring, constructing,
or installing any lands, buildings, or facilities.
Votes on Final Passage:
Senate 46 0
House 96 0
Effective: July 24, 2005