Ky. losing ground, losing out as low-income youth can't afford college
This from the
Herald-Leader:
Some of the best things in life may be free, as the song says, but higher education is not among them.
It
is expensive and time-consuming. Although in the long term a
post-secondary degree almost always means higher pay, in the short term
it means giving up income to study.
That's why grants are so
important to students from families that have few resources to help
their children through the lean student years to reach the payoff at the
end.
And that's why the annual report card issued by Kentucky's
Council on Postsecondary Education represens such distressing news about
the lack of progress for minority and low-income students.
The
number of qualified low-income students without grants has skyrocketed,
from 68,259 in the 2009-10 school year to 107,552 in 2012-13. No
surprise then, the CPE also reported that Kentucky is losing ground in
the college-going rate of high school graduates and in associate degrees
among low-income students, and has made almost no progress on
graduation rates among minority students.
The CPE cites a number
of factors behind these unacceptable trends. Ironically, efforts to
encourage high school kids to think about college have worked and so
more are applying for student aid.
But also, with the state's
coffers shrinking from the combined effects of a recession and an
outdated tax code, state spending on higher education has been cut by
$173 million since 2008.
Tax receipt reports this week indicated
that Kentucky's economy may be making a modest recovery but education —
and all other — funding will remain dicey until the General Assembly
enacts true tax reform.
What we have now is a 20th century code
riddled with tax breaks, and more handed out each year based on the
magical thinking that subsidizing almost any job will put us on the path
to prosperity.
It won't.
That Kentucky needs tax reform is
not news. Democrats and Republicans agree on it, although not the
details, and multiple studies over decades have made the case for it and
solid recommendations about how to fix our tax code.
What's been
lacking is political will. As the CPE report demonstrates, that lack of
will has consequences. Among them are the tens of thousands of young
Kentuckians who have the ability and desire to earn a degree after high
school so they can have a better life but who will not get the help they
need to realize that dream.
And, when individual Kentuckians
can't realize their potential, the state suffers. Lower wages mean lower
state revenues which in turn leads to more cuts to education,
underfunded pensions, collapsing infrastructure. It is not a winning
formula.
1 comment:
Citizen's buying power continues to decline as post secondary becomes even more expensive. Not sure what the answer is anymore except move to Finland or Lake Woebegone.
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