Kansas universities continue trend of rising tuition

by Stephan Bisaha, Kansas News Service

Tuition at public universities in Kansas is going up. School officials blame the increase on rising costs and years of dwindling state funding alongside flat enrollment.

The hikes all fall below the 3.1 percent average increase for state universities across the nation last year. Still, most Kansas public universities received increases above the nation’s inflation rate of about 2 percent.

Ron Barrett Gonzalez, a professor of aerospace engineering at the University of Kansas, called the increases “excessive.”

“They keep beating inflation by a long way and that’s not appropriate,” Gonzalez said.

Kansas State University had the smallest proportional increase with a 1.2 percent tuition-and-fees hike. In its proposal, K-State said the increase is its smallest request since 1989. (Fort Hays State University had the smallest raw increase at $61.95 per semester).

K-State credits the recent restoration of $15 million in higher education funding from the state for keeping the increase lower than it would have been otherwise.

“We made a very intentional effort this year to say if we get money back from the state we’re going to do everything we can to keep tuition down,” said Jeff Morris, vice president of communications at K-State.

But that restoration failed to fully restore the $30 million in cuts enacted statewide in 2016. Other universities had larger tuition percentage increases. Wichita State University, for instance, had a 2.2 percent increase. Wichita State said it is using some of the restored funds for scholarships, while the tuition increase is being used to cover rising costs, such as healthcare and utilities.

“None of us like increases, but there are some overall expenses that are always going to be a part of doing business at the university,” said Rick Muma, the provost at Wichita State.

Without the increases, Muma said, the university would have to make hard choices, such as cuts to student services. Meanwhile, new services have struggled to get started under the university’s current budget restrictions. Wichita State has planned on hiring “student success coaches” to proactively reach out to struggling students, but hiring for the program has been on hold for at least four years because of budget constraints.

A growing portion of university budgets are being covered by tuition.

Before 2008, tuition revenue covered less than half of the educational costs at Kansas’ public universities. In 2017, tuition accounted for more than 70 percent.

“If our enrollment were to increase, that would help offset any type of tuition increase we would need,” said Howard Smith, the associate vice president of enrollment management at Pittsburg State University.

Yet Kansas universities have been struggling to draw more students. Enrollment has mostly stayed flat in recent years. Smith attributes that partly to increased competition.

“There (are) more institutions and more programs out there delivered in different programs,” Smith said, “so students have more choice than they’ve ever had.”

Flat enrollment numbers are more than a revenue issue. Increasing enrollment is seen as a way to stave off workforce shortages.

The Kansas Board of Regents’ strategic plan, Foresight 2020, aims to increase the number of adults in Kansas with a post-secondary degree to avoid such shortages. Kansas public universities have fallen short of the plan’s targets, however, and some of those shortages are already impacting the state.

“There is really a crisis in terms of the ability of talent in our state,” said Blake Flanders, the president of the Kansas Board of Regents. “We want to be able to train and educate our future workforce so we can keep our businesses competitive.”

Tuition may also function as a deterrent. While Flanders said that tuition increases are necessary to maintain quality without an increase in state funding, any hike raises the concern of restricting access to higher education.

“Anytime you raise tuition, you have to watch very closely that Kansans can afford to access the system,” Flanders said. “That’s always been our concern.”

Stephan Bisaha reports on education for KMUW in Wichita and the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KMUW, Kansas Public Radio, KCUR and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. Follow him on @SteveBisaha. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to the original post.
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Publishing effort continues with book on Wyandotte County history

Vincent J. Lane

The second volume of “A Historical Overview of Wyandotte County” will be released at a book signing starting at 2 p.m. Sunday, July 8, in the Wyandotte County Museum at 631 N. 126th St., in Wyandotte County Park, Bonner Springs.

Loren L. Taylor, a Wyandotte County lawyer who edited and produced the book, said that much of the material in this volume concerns exciting events that have had little or no coverage. Taylor is also the historian for the Wyandotte County Historical Society and also editor of The Wyandotte County Historical Journal.

Taylor said the book includes items such as the political impact of the Ku Klux Klan, the assassination of a developer for the Union Pacific Railroad who was killed on Minnesota Avenue and details of the movement of the Wyandot Nation Indian tribe from Upper Sandusky, Ohio, to Wyandott City.

Early day community leaders such as Vincent J. Lane are profiled. Lane was an early day postmaster and newspaper editor. He was also an influential political leader and the founder of the Wyandotte County Historical Society.

Another leader was Frank H. Betton who owned a saw mill in the Pomeroy community. Betton also helped buy bonds that financed the schoolhouse in Pomeroy. He also served as Commissioner of Labor for Kansas Gov. John A. Martin.

Items concerning the employees of the North American Aviation plant in the Fairfax Industrial District during World War II and the Korean conflict are included. Dr. Dan Desko tells of the B-25 bomber aircraft and the personnel who built and tested the aircraft.

An early day history of the law and the legal system are also included.

There are hundreds of other topics including the history of education by Patricia Adams, a retired Kansas City, Kansas, School District employee, and the influence of German immigrants on business, politics and civic activities.

Other books that Taylor edited and produced include “The Consolidated Ethnic History of Wyandotte County,” “The Historic Communities of Wyandotte County” and “A Historical Overview of Wyandotte County and Its Historic Sites.”

For more information, telephone Loren L. Taylor at 913-321-6195.