By GENARO C. ARMAS
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) Penn State's president wants to avoid
raising tuition at midyear, but stopped short of promising against
a rate hike as the university awaits its long-delayed state
funding.
About $334 million in state subsidies for Penn State is stuck in
legislative gridlock as lawmakers try to resolve differences on a
bill to legalize and tax table games at the state's slot-machine
casinos.
Penn State and leaders of the commonwealth's other state-related
institutions Lincoln, Pitt and Temple said in a letter last
month to top state officials that the funding held up for months
must be approved soon or it might lead to unforeseen tuition hikes
for the spring semester.
The spring bill at Penn State will be sent out soon, president
Graham Spanier said.
''The last thing we want to do is raise tuition in the middle of
the year,'' Spanier said Friday at a meeting of the university
trustees. ''That would really throw a loop to our students.
''We will not do that except under the most dire of
circumstances.''
Tuition varies according to class year, campus and, in some
cases, major. Currently, a full-time, in-state freshman or
sophomore at Penn State's main campus pays $6,800 per semester,
while an out-of-state freshman or sophomore pays nearly twice that
at more than $12,500.
Spanier said tuition rates should remain stable if the
university receives the Senate-approved funding of $334 million,
though that could change if the full Legislature decides to slash
that amount.
''This great challenge is not just a challenge to the
university, but a challenge to the 94,000 students and their
families,'' trustee Keith Eckel said. ''That is a difficult
situation to be in.''
Students at the other state-related schools apparently face
similar scenarios. School officials have not said if, or how high
they would raise tuition bills.
Funding limbo for the current school year also forced trustees
to table discussion again on its state appropriations request for
the 2010-11 academic year. That request is typically submitted in
September.
Trustees did OK a hike in room and board rates for next academic
year to cover increased operating and maintenance costs. The
average rate will be $4,185 per semester, an increase of $100 or
more than 2.4 percent from this year.
Penn State said it was the smallest increase in room and board
in a decade.
Enrollment across the university system is up 1.8 percent to
more than 94,300, though much of that growth is due to students
taking classes online. Applications are up to a record 109,031,
with much of the growth in out-of-state and international
applications.
Requests for financial aid are also up amid the uncertain
economic climate, said Anna Griswold, an assistant vice president.
About 75 percent of undergraduate students applied for some form of
financial assistance in the past year, compared with 66 percent a
decade earlier.
Also Friday, Spanier reported that there have been about 2,000
diagnosed cases of swine flu at the university, or roughly 250 new
cases per week, though the number seems to have leveled off in
recent weeks. And, trustees approved final plans for a new
children's hospital to be built on the campus of the Penn State
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center in Hershey.
(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)