EDINBORO — If it’s going to help her and her parents pay for college, Edinboro University of Pennsylvania freshman Emily Klees said she’s all for it.
On Thursday, Gov. Edward G. Rendell visited the Edinboro campus to discuss his proposal to make going to college in Pennsylvania more affordable by legalizing video poker and taxing its proceeds. He said if passed, the measure could add up to as much as $7,600 a year in relief for more than 170,000 students attending state-owned or community colleges.
“It seems like a good idea,” said Klees. “My parents are helping me pay for college.”
Doing that was hard enough before the national economic downturn, Rendell said to an invited crowd at Edinboro’s Frank G. Pogue Student Center. Now, the downturn “has worsened the crisis facing families who are struggling to save for college. Many families who saved diligently for their children’s education have watched those savings evaporate — through no fault of their own,” Rendell said.
That stated, Rendell is pushing for the state General Assembly to promptly approve his Pennsylvania Tuition Relief Act, announced as part of the governor’s 2009-’10 budget proposal. If approved, the plan could start this fall with incoming freshman.
Under Rendell’s proposed relief act, all incoming students attending state-owned or community colleges would pay what they could afford as established by state financial aid practices. For families with income under $100,000, students could obtain as much as $7,600 yearly to help pay for tuition, fees, room and board.
Families earning less than $32,000 a year would pay $1,000 a year for each child in college, Rendell said.
The governor’s budget also includes a $35 million increase in Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency tuition grants. That increase will dedicate $10 million for PHEAA grants to nearly 10,000 additional community college students, Rendell said.
Rendell and his staff said their plan to boost tuition aid by as much as $550 million a year with revenue from the proposed legalization and taxation of video poker machines has been well-received by the public, and noted other states have successfully generated hundreds of millions in revenue using the same approach.
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