published Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

College tuition hike likely for the state of Tennessee

Students at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga could pay at least 5 percent more for tuition next year if Gov. Phil Bredesen’s recommended state budget is approved at the end of the legislative session, UT officials said today.

“It is going to be a bad year,” said John Petersen, president of the University of Tennessee. “We have to work with the state and take baby steps.”

As the state considers budgetary shortfalls and state agencies face reductions in the coming fiscal year, UT’s board of trustees discussed tuition increases and how to overcome the funding cuts at its winter board meeting at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.

Along with UTC, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville and University of Memphis will have tuition increases between 7 and 9 percent, records show.

Dr. Petersen said UTC and the University of Tennessee at Knoxville received less state funding than peer institutions in other states in 2007.

While UTC received $5,759 in appropriations in 2007, Dr. Petersen, who made a report to the board’s finance and administration committee, said the average state funding for a school comparable to UTC is $7,662.

“It’s a stretch and a strain,” he said of the funding issue.

In order to keep up with inflation and increased operating costs, tuition has jumped 90 percent at UTC in the past eight years, and other universities have seen similar increases, according to the report.

For complete details, see tomorrow’s Chattanooga Times Free Press.

about Joan Garrett...

Joan Garrett has been a staff writer for the Times Free Press since August 2007. Before becoming a general assignment writer for the paper, she wrote about business, higher education and the court systems. She grew up the oldest of five sisters near Birmingham, Ala., and graduated with a master's and bachelor's degrees in journalism from the University of Alabama. Before landing her first full-time job as a reporter at the Times Free Press, she ...

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