Horowitz: Raimondo’s Free College Tuition Proposal - A Smart Investment in RI’s Future

Rob Horowitz, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Horowitz: Raimondo’s Free College Tuition Proposal - A Smart Investment in RI’s Future

Boosting the percentage of Rhode Islanders who earn college degrees is central to making our state more economically competitive. For businesses thinking about locating or expanding here, access to an educated and skilled workforce is a top consideration. Additionally  a college degree is more important than ever to an individual’s ability to earn a middle class income. As documented in a 2014 PEW study, among young adults, ages 25-32, who are working full time, those with college degrees earn about $17,500 more annually than those with only a high school diploma.  This is the largest education-based pay gap in the modern era-more than double what it was less than 50 years ago in 1965. 

To increase the percentage of people starting college in the first place and most importantly, sticking with it and graduating, requires making college more affordable.  Research shows financial pressure is a key factor in people leaving college before earning their degree.  Not surprisingly, students from low income backgrounds, who tend to face serious financial difficulties, have lower college completion rates than their wealthier peers.  

Governor Gina Raimondo’s proposal for providing two years of free tuition at Rhode Island public colleges, if adopted, is a giant step forward towards making college more affordable to Rhode Islanders. Aptly named “Rhode Island’s Promise’, it goes a long way towards restoring the American promise of equality of opportunity to Rhode Island youth.

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More specifically as outlined in a media release announcing the proposal, “The Governor's free-college plan covers the entire cost of tuition and mandatory fees for full-time students who qualify for in-state tuition earning an associate's degree at CCRI. At RIC and URI, the scholarship will cover tuition and fees for a student's junior and senior years.”

Governor Raimondo said, “When I was my children's age, most jobs in Rhode Island required nothing more than high school degree. But for all of our kids, that's not the case anymore. The reality is most jobs being created now in Rhode Island will require some degree or certificate beyond a high school diploma. We are going to stand up and make the college dream a reality for every Rhode Islander who wants it."

The proposal will substantially reduce the amount of debt students need to incur—debt that creates great financial hardships and is a drag on the state’s economy because it reduces young college graduates purchasing power forcing delays in first time home buying, among other spending.  According to the Governor’s office, the average student graduating from a Rhode Island college incurs more than $35,000 in debt. That is the second highest debt load in the nation.

At an estimated annual total cost of $30 million when fully implemented, this proposal is truly cost-effective and will move Rhode Island from lagging dangerously behind to the head of the class on college affordability.

The General Assembly should move quickly to adopt this proposal. It is a smart investment in our children’s and our state’s economic future.

Rob Horowitz is a strategic and communications consultant who provides general consulting, public relations, direct mail services and polling for national and state issue organizations, various non-profits and elected officials and candidates. He is an Adjunct Professor of Political Science at the University of Rhode Island


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