Texarkana Gazette

Will free college offer catch fire?

New York details raise doubts

- By Anna Gronewold

ALBANY, N.Y.—Will New York’s first-in-the-nation free tuition program for middle-class college students spread to other states?

That’s the hope of proponents such as Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton, who made debt-free college a key talking point in their Democratic presidenti­al campaigns. And that’s the prediction of its main champion, Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who called the plan a “model for the nation.”

But even as higher education experts applaud the concept of free tuition, they question finer points of New York’s plan and whether it’s a model that should be replicated elsewhere.

New York’s plan would cover in-state public college tuition for full-time students whose families earn $125,000 or less, a benefit that could extend to 32,000 students a year. Some experts are concerned the plan would actually do little to help the neediest students, whose tuition is already covered by other aid. They also question the plan not addressing other college costs beyond tuition.

And there has already been much debate about a restrictio­n—added late in the negotiatio­ns—that recipients live and work in the state for the number of years they receive the benefit. If students move out of state, the money would be converted into a loan that must be repaid.

“Students are not going to plan for future debt because they’re going to think they don’t have any,” said Sara Goldrick-Rab, a Temple University expert on college affordabil­ity issues. “And then they’ll get a job in another state and they’re going to get smacked in the face literally by the state of New York for the bill.”

Goldrick-Rab said the restrictio­n betrays students by changing the narrative from broad free college tuition to a workforce developmen­t initiative.

State University of New York Chancellor Nancy Zimpher says the controvers­y may be overblown, noting that about 85 percent of graduates from the state university system stay in New York after graduation anyway. “It kind of tamps down the drama,” she said.

Even Sanders, who has long advocated addressing the nation’s $1.3 trillion student debt problem, acknowledg­ed there are some aspects of New York’s plan he disagrees with. But he gave Cuomo and New York lawmakers credit for being first to tackle it.

“They have paved the way for other states to go forward, for the federal government to go forward to make public colleges and universiti­es tuition free,” the Vermont senator said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I see that as a tremendous achievemen­t, and we look forward to other states following New York.”

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