October 22, 2000
MORE THAN EVER, COLLEGE AID A DEVISIVE ISSUE
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"I want to fully fund needs-based," Wise said. "Maybe there should be a

 

mix. Cap the PROMISE scholarship at $15 million until you are able to

 

cover all the needs-based."

 

 

West Virginia's need-based program, the Higher Education Grant Program,

 

has run short on money every year of its life. This year, 2,500 eligible

 

  • tudents didn't get aid because the grant program ran out of money.
  •  

     

    Underwood has pledged huge funding increases for the grant program - $6

     

    million in 1999 and $7.6 million in 2000. But they never came about,

     

    although funding has gone up $1 million to $2 million every year since

     

    Underwood became governor.

     

     

    The head policy analyst for the national College Board agrees

     

    with Underwood that need-based aid is the way to go. Too many

     

  • tates are putting their money into merit-based scholarships, Larry
  •  

    Gladieux said.

     

     

    The problem is there's already a slew of private scholarships available

     

    for smart kids. So they're going to be able to go to college, no

     

    matter what. The kids who need the help, Gladieux said, are the ones with

     

    poorer, less educated parents who haven't been able to help them much with

     

    homework over the years, or haven't exposed them to educational

     

    opportunities, and can't help them pay for college.

     

     

    Giardina wants to put more money into the Higher Education Grant

     

    Program. Myers would abolish it, and instead issue vouchers that

     

  • tudents could use at any college.
  •  

     

    - - -

     

     

    There's one big drama going on in West Virginia higher education that

     

  • either Wise nor Underwood wants to call off: the fallout from Senate Bill
  •  

    653, the brainchild of a handful of very powerful legislators that has

     

  • ent colleges into a tizzy of fear and indignation.
  •  

     

    "I'm going to hold institutions, to the extent that I can through my

     

    appointments to governing boards, to the principles in 653," Wise said.

     

    "And at the end of the time, we'll have a community college system

     

    instituted."

     

     

    Wise agrees with the Legislature that to improve West Virginia's

     

    economy, the state should encourage more people to go to community

     

    college. A Colorado consultant hired by the Legislature reported

     

    that some of the state's community colleges aren't doing their jobs, and

     

    they should be taken away from the four-year colleges that spawned them.

     

     

    Four-year colleges don't like that idea, because community colleges

     

    generate a lot of money. The Legislature agreed to give the four-year

     

    colleges a year to prove that they can run things right. Wise wants to

     

    follow that plan.

     

     

    He doesn't want to let legislators use 653 as an excuse to build new

     

    community colleges in their district, as House Finance Chairman Harold

     

    Michael recently did in Hardy County.

     

     

    "I think anybody who's looking to build new bricks and mortar is going

     

    to be disappointed," Wise said.

     

     

    Myers said he would leave it up to a free market to determine whether

     

    the state needs more or better community colleges. Giardina said community

     

    colleges are more effective and efficient when they're attached to

     

    four-year colleges, so she'd just ignore the consultant's recommendation.

     

     

    "It's treated as a piece of pork for legislators to say, 'Let's build

     

    this in my district,'" she said. As for Michael's Eastern Community

     

    College, Giardina said she'd get the state out from under that

     

    before it wastes any more money.

     

     

    "It's a rip-off," she said.

     

     

    To contact staff writer Tara Tuckwiller, use e-mail or call 348-5189.

     

     

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