|
Dateline: May 16,
2002
Rylander
idea could benefit CC
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
An
election year proposal from Texas Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander has
gotten the attention of officials at Clarendon College and other junior
colleges around the state.
Last
Tuesday, Rylander unveiled her TexasNextStep proposal, which would allow
any graduating high school senior in the state to attend a community
college or technical school free for two years.
“My
goal is clear – I want Texas to have the most educated workforce in the
nation,” Rylander said, noting that the program will make a K-14
education the norm in Texas.
TexasNextStep
would use $150 million in lottery revenues to pay the tuition and required
fees, plus the cost of textbooks, of every Texas student who enrolls
within 16 months of high school graduation. The program would cover up to
60 semester hours plus any remediation needed.
“I
think it’s a good plan,” said CC President Myles Shelton. “But any
proposal in a campaign year has some ambiguity to it.”
Shelton
said Rylander has captured the interest of community colleges, but more
information is still needed. He also questioned how the new program would
interact with existing state and federal financial aid programs.
Rylander’s
website says the new program would cover expenses for students in two-year
schools while existing programs would be used for those who directly enter
four-year schools or transfer from a community college.
“If
it really is a program that pays for two years of college regardless of
financial need and separate from other programs, then I wonder if $150
million is really enough,” Shelton said.
CC
is one of the smallest colleges in the state, and it alone collects
approximately $1 million in tuition and fees.
The
concept of using state lottery revenue to pay for college educations is
not new. Shelton said the idea has been talked about in Texas ever since
Georgia started a similar program several years ago.
“This
has the potential to be a great thing for our college and our
community,” Shelton said.
TexasNextStep
is far from becoming reality though. Rylander, who faces Democratic
challenger Marty Atkins in November, will have to win re-election, and
then the new Legislature would have to implement the idea if the money is
available.
Still,
Rylander hopes the program will disprove a prediction from the US Bureau
of Labor Statistics which says 60 percent of Texans will have only a high
school diploma or less by 2030.
|