(1) Beginning
with the 2007-08 academic year and ending with the 2016-17
academic year, tuition fees charged to full-time resident
undergraduate students may increase no greater than seven percent
over the previous academic year in any institution of higher
education. Annual reductions or increases in full-time tuition
fees for resident undergraduate students shall be as provided in
the omnibus appropriations act, within the seven percent increase
limit established in this section. To the extent that state
appropriations combined with tuition and fee revenues are
insufficient to achieve the total per-student funding goals
established in subsection (2) of this section, the legislature
may revisit state appropriations, authorized enrollment levels,
and changes in tuition fees for any given fiscal year.
(2) The state shall adopt as its goal total per-student
funding levels, from state appropriations plus tuition and fees,
of at least the sixtieth percentile of total per-student funding
at similar public institutions of higher education in the global
challenge states. In defining comparable per-student funding
levels, the office of financial management shall adjust for
regional cost-of-living differences; for differences in program
offerings and in the relative mix of lower division, upper
division, and graduate students; and for accounting and reporting
differences among the comparison institutions. The office of
financial management shall develop a funding trajectory for each
four-year institution of higher education and for the community
and technical college system as a whole that when combined with
tuition and fees revenue allows the state to achieve its funding
goal for each four-year institution and the community and
technical college system as a whole no later than fiscal year
2017. The state shall not reduce enrollment levels below fiscal
year 2007 budgeted levels in order to improve or alter the
per-student funding amount at any four-year institution of higher
education or the community and technical college system as a
whole. The state recognizes that each four-year institution of
higher education and the community and technical college system
as a whole have different funding requirements to achieve desired
performance levels, and that increases to the total per-student
funding amount may need to exceed the minimum funding goal.
(3) By September 1st of each year beginning [in] 2008, the
office of financial management shall report to the governor, the
higher education coordinating board, and appropriate committees
of the legislature with updated estimates of the total
per-student funding level that represents the sixtieth percentile
of funding for comparable institutions of higher education in the
global challenge states, and the progress toward that goal that
was made for each of the public institutions of higher education.
(4) As used in this section, "global challenge states" are
the top performing states on the new economy index published by
the progressive policy institute as of July 22, 2007. The new
economy index ranks states on indicators of their potential to
compete in the new economy. At least once every five years, the
office of financial management shall determine if changes to the
list of global challenge states are appropriate. The office of
financial management shall report its findings to the governor
and the legislature.
[2007 c 151 § 1.]
NOTES:
Captions not law -- 2007 c 151: "Captions used in this act are not any part of the law." [2007 c 151 § 3.]