Ohio Choice Grant - are we going to lose it?

<p>I feel like this is one more strike against our decision! A loss of $900 over 4 years = $3600 - that's a big loss as far as I"m concerned...</p>

<p>COLUMBUS - Nearly 45,000 Ohio residents attending four-year private colleges instead of taxpayer-supported schools could lose as much $35.7 million in financial aid under Gov. Ted Strickland's proposed budget, the private schools say.</p>

<p>The students no longer would be able to count on a $900 check that arrives each year regardless of their families' income. The state would instead target a smaller pot of private school aid to those most in need.</p>

<p>"A thousand dollars is a lot to lose," said Danielle Goubeaux, a biology-premedicine major from Coldwater, Ohio. She said she looked at public and private colleges before settling on Ohio Northern University in Ada.</p>

<p>She's paying for her education and said she will probably have to borrow more to cover the loss of the Student Choice Grant.</p>

<p>In his State of the State Address, Mr. Strickland lumped this change in with other proposals that choose public institutions over private.</p>

<p>He called for the elimination of Ohio's statewide voucher program helping parents with youngsters in failing K-12 schools to pay tuition at private schools. He also asked lawmakersto eliminate aid for students at for-profit career colleges whose degrees aren't recognized by the Board of Regents.</p>

<p>While Mr. Strickland has proposed reducing the choice grant program that exclusively benefits state residents choosing private colleges, many still would benefit from an already mapped-out expansion of another financial-aid program that benefits students at both public and private institutions.</p>

<p>The governor also called for increased state support for public universities in exchange for promises they would freeze tuition next year and raise it no more than 3 percent in 2009.</p>

<p>"It's simply a matter of making priority choices, and the overall goal of the administration is to increase the number of students who are in higher education, both public and private," said Ohio's new higher education chancellor, Eric Fingerhut. "The surest way to do that is to make college affordable for as many people as possible. We need to focus available aid dollars on those in financial need."</p>

<p>Under the choice grant program, the state provides grants of $900 to more than 58,000 students at roughly 50 private schools, including the likes of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Xavier University in Cincinnati, Heidelberg College in Tiffin, and Lourdes College in Toledo.</p>

<p>"We know they will lose the money," said C. Todd Jones, president of the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Ohio. Members include most of the private, four-year colleges in the state.</p>

<p>"It's a question of whether [the students] will leave the school, choose to move to a neighboring state, or choose not to go to college entirely," Mr. Jones said. "Toledo is a great example of that. Right now the cost of attending Lourdes College and the University of Toledo is about the same. If this [grant] disappears, some [Lourdes] students may drive across the border to Michigan."</p>

<p>He said private schools would lobby the Republican-controlled General Assembly to restore the funding.
ALSO
? See a chart on the proposed cuts to Ohio's student choice grant program </p>

<p>While the choice grant program would be downsized from $52.9 million this year to just under $18 million, the Democratic governor plans to stick with an existing plan to broaden the Ohio College Opportunity Grant program. That need-based program would help roughly 100,000 students at public and private schools.</p>

<p>The program considers a family's assets and other need factors when determining the size of grants.</p>

<p>The governor's budget also would not interfere with the current practice under that program of doubling grants for students choosing private schools over public, a recognition that such schools get little taxpayer help while playing a significant role in educating Ohioans.</p>

<p>It's also recognition, said Mr. Fingerhut, that tuition at private schools is, on average, much higher than that of taxpayer-supported schools such as the University of Toledo and Ohio State University.</p>

<p>"Sending $900 to every student regardless of whether that makes a difference in the choice of school or ability to go to school is a classic peanut-butter scenario," Mr. Fingerhut said. "You can send $900 to everybody or you can focus on where you can really make a difference."</p>

<p>The private college association estimates that 1,979, or 82 percent, of full-time students receiving the $900-a-year grants at Ohio Northern University will no longer qualify under Mr. Strickland's proposal. The $1.6 million lost by Ohio Northern students would have to be made up by families digging deeper into their pockets, borrowing more, or finding other financial aid.</p>

<p>ONU President Kendall Baker said the governor's proposal could prompt students to opt for a public universities instead, ultimately helping to increase pressure for state support in that area. Or they could go out of state, risking the possibility they may never return.</p>

<p>"If [the cut] happens in the fall, we'll really be in a dilemma because we've already prepared thousands of financial-aid packages that include that $900 grant," Mr. Baker said. "We're already getting questions from families, and we'll get more."</p>

<p>ONU's tuition is $29,403 a year, compared to $7,929 for in-state undergraduate tuition at taxpayer-supported UT.</p>

<p>At the University of Findlay, 1,702, or 88 percent of current grant recipients, are expected to lose almost $1.4 million.</p>

<p>UF President DeBow Freed said this would not make or break the school of 3,300 undergraduate and 1,200 graduate students, but it could impact individual families.</p>

<p>"It's critically important for families who have made the choice to have their children get the type of education that they want and they think would be most beneficial, " he said. "They make great commitments for it. They borrow. It's a family choice almost always, so it places an additional burden on the family."</p>

<p>UF's average tuition this year is $21,836.</p>

<p>Jason Wilch, a UF junior from a middle-income family who commutes from Upper Sandusky, said the loss of the grant would not cause him to leave the school.</p>

<p>"I'd come up with a way, but it would be more of a burden," he said.</p>

<p>UF provides financial aid to more than 87 percent of all undergraduates with an average financial aid package worth $15,654.</p>

<p>"There's no evidence that [losing the $900 grant] would impact the choice individuals make," Mr. Fingerhut said. "If you attend private school, an additional $900 is nice, but there's no evidence it would be the deciding factor."</p>

<p>Mr. Strickland's budget would increase annual spending on the broader-opportunity grants for students from lower and moderate-income families from $150.6 million to $182.5 million next year.</p>

<p>"There's a lot of savings by cutting the private [school] side, but where is that money going?" Sen. Randy Gardner (R., Bowling Green) asked. "The only thing that is happening is they are continuing what was already established in previous General Assemblies. My guess is most legislators would say there's nothing new in terms of greater accessibility for students."</p>

<p>The opportunity grant expansion would be accomplished by more than doubling the family income cap from $36,000 a year to $75,000. The maximum grant a student could get to attend a publicly supported school would climb from $2,190 to $2,496, a 14 percent increase.</p>

<p>The corresponding doubling of the award for a student opting for a private school would mean a student whose family meets the income criteria could receive up to $4,992, plus $900 from the scaled-back Student Choice Grant program.</p>

<p>Nobody else from Ohio??!</p>

<p>Yes, I think we'll lose it. For the family sending a child to a private school it's relatively minor but across the state it ends up being pretty big $ and I don't think it really tips someone to stay in-state or not.</p>

<p>Thanks for posting this abasket. </p>

<p>I missed this part of Strickland's changes. It does make a difference in our family if that grant is lost. That was part of the financial decision to choose a school in Ohio.</p>

<p>I haven't heard anything more recent - anyone? Wonder how soon the decision has to be made to affect this year?</p>

<p>I'm surprised if the award is taken away from current students. Wouldn't it be smarter to change it from this year on?</p>

<p>As far as I'm concerned, D had it in her financial aid packet we accepted so I'd like to think WE should get it this year too! But I know it doesn't work that way...</p>

<p>Strickland lost my vote - actually he never had it, but cutting financial aid for merit-based aid loses votes, plain and simple. Affected students and their parents are all going to reconsider their support for Strickland. Not a good political move on his part.<br>
Cutting merit aid only screws the middle class more</p>

<p>I see in today's paper that he is also cutting the vouchers for the grade school students.</p>

<p>Opinion page letter from the presidents of Xavier University and Mt. St. Joseph College. Cincinnati Enquirer Sunday, April 15.
<a href="http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070415/EDIT02/704150309/1090/EDIT%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070415/EDIT02/704150309/1090/EDIT&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>"...The Student Choice Grant is a sound investment. The median family income in Ohio is $54,000. The current Student Choice Grant is $900 per student. That essential assistance helped 58,000 families pursue higher education in Ohio, including 933 at the College of Mount St. Joseph and 1,740 at Xavier University.</p>

<p>The grant makes an enormous impact on families who may otherwise fall through the cracks when it comes to many need-based funding plans, especially middle income, working class families. The Student Choice Grant, for example, helps fill the gap between financial aid and tuition for families who don't qualify for the Ohio College Opportunity Grant.</p>

<p>Every penny makes a difference to Ohio families who want to send their children to the Ohio colleges that best meet their needs."</p>

<p>I am the Director of PR at the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Ohio (AICUO). Our association represents 51 private colleges in Ohio and we are monitoring the Student Choice Grant issue very closely and are lobbying to save the grant at its full funding. </p>

<p>To answer a couple of the question previously posted, if the Executive Budget proposed by the Governor passes as is, 3/4 of the students currently receiving the grant will lose it starting this fall. This will equate to $900 per student per year in lost grants. </p>

<p>If you would like to contact your legislators and/or the governor on this issue, or if you would like to learn more about just how these proposed cuts will hurt Ohio's college students, visit our website dedicated to this issue: <a href="http://www.SaveStudentChoice.com%5B/url%5D"&gt;www.SaveStudentChoice.com&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p>

<p>AICUO thanks for clarification - I posted the link to write to legislatures I found on my D's college site . I'll find it and bump it so others might take a few minutes to show support. </p>

<p>Any one who can, please take a few minutes to click and show your support to save these grants...!</p>