Is Matt Brown Forcing Gina Raimondo Left in Rhode Island Governor's Race?

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Is Matt Brown Forcing Gina Raimondo Left in Rhode Island Governor's Race?

Brown v. Raimondo -- the latest.
On Monday, Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo unveiled her plan to re-introduce taxpayer-funded tuition for Rhode Island students for two years at Rhode Island College (RIC) and the University of Rhode Island (URI), in addition to the Community College of Rhode Island (CCRI), as part of her plan for "universal education" for all Rhode Islanders -- if re-elected in November.

With a heated Democratic gubernatorial primary looming, is progressive opponent Matt Brown pushing Raimondo further to the left?

Raimondo had previously pushed for two years of free tuition at the state's four-year institutions -- only to have it shot down at the General Assembly, who voted for the CCRI-program only.

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Then, a GoLocal investigation in March uncovered that the projected amount of  "Rhode Island Promise" scholarship students on track to graduate in two years from CCRI after the first semester was below 15%.

Brown V. Raimondo

"Governor Raimondo has led the way in increasing college access and affordability. She created Rhode Island Promise, which provides two free years of tuition at CCRI for every Rhode Island high school graduate. The program has increased enrollment and the number of students on track to graduate in its first year," announced Raimondo's campaign on Monday.

"Under her Universal Education and Job Training plan, Raimondo will expand the successful Rhode Island Promise scholarship to make the second two years at the University of Rhode Island and Rhode Island College tuition-free, as well as making the Promise scholarship available to adults at the Community College of Rhode Island for both full-time and part-time students," continued the campaign.

Brown's campaign -- which has sparred in recent weeks with Raimondo's camp from her opioid industry money,  to his fossil fuel donations -- took a swipe in response. 

"Every election year, Governor Raimondo tries to sound like a Democrat, but in office, she breaks those promises and governs like a Republican: giving special tax breaks to her corporate campaign donors, while slashing funding for Medicaid and cutting human services, which led to thousands of children going hungry because of the UHIP disaster and children in state care dying because she wouldn't give DCYF the resources it needed to keep kids safe," said Brown campaign spokesperson Ron Knox on Monday. 

"Making in-state college tuition free is a laudable goal, but voters know her record doesn't match her words," added Knox. "She's out for herself, not for Rhode Islanders. As Governor, Matt Brown's priority will always be looking out for the people of Rhode Island."

Free-College Still Under Fire

As GoLocal reported in March 2018:

GoLocal has secured a copy of a confidential Community College of Rhode Island report that states an overwhelming majority of the CCRI students that received free tuition under the state’s new free tuition program — Promise Scholarship — are falling behind and will not graduate on schedule.

The top Community College of Rhode Island official told some CCRI faculty and administration officials that the current requirements for the RI Promise Scholarship program are a "barrier to advancement" — and suggested that lowering the bar for the state's recently enacted free college tuition program for the state's community college could raise success rates. 

In a nine-page report presented at the President's Council on March 28 by CCRI Vice President and Chief Outcome Office Sara Enright, the current requirements of a 2.5 GPA and 30 credits a year for the Promise Scholarship, which was championed by Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo and approved by the General Assembly last year — are now being called into question as too stringent.

"Data regarding RI Promise students was originally requested in early November 2017 and none was produced until this week. The data produced does not present a compelling case for continuing the program and questions remain as to how the College spent the close to $3 million dollars received from the state to fund this program," said Steve Murray, President of the CCRI Faculty Union. 

"The Governor and the legislature created the program and the requirements that accompanied it. Asking a student to maintain a 2.5 average (less than a B average) to receive this type of financial assistance does not seem to be asking for too much from them and to lower the required GPA below 2.5 wouldn’t send students nor the taxpayers who fund this program, the message that we are looking to students to excel," said Murray. 


GoLocal Statewide Poll - Conducted by Harvard's Della Volpe - June, 2018

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