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5 pages in length. Washington has a high-quality higher education system that historically has been affordable and accessible. However, as of the beginning of the school year, major tuition hikes were put into effect due to state budget cuts caused by the state's growing deficit, which make it that much harder for starving students already dealing with the rising cost of rent, inflation, and high unemployment. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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File: LM1_TLCHikes.rtf
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tuition hikes were put into effect due to state budget cuts caused by the states growing deficit, which make it that much harder for starving students already dealing with the
rising cost of rent, inflation, and high unemployment. II. TUITION BEFORE THE HIKES Commitment to higher education has been a long-standing
mantra of Washington states colleges and universities, a pledge that has been maintained in part by the standard of reasonable tuition fees. However, that commitment is beginning to yield
to a state deficit subsidized in part by higher student tuition. Prior to the bureaucratically imposed hikes, tuition paid approximately forty-five percent of a college budget, a healthy jump
from nearly twenty-seven percent ten years ago. Naturally, students protested this proposed increase, working hard to be heard through rallies where hundreds of people gathered to take a stand
against paying for the states deficit. Said Timothy Hogg, WSU student and student government communications director: "We want to make students aware it could be a possible 18-20 percent
increases in student tuition this year" (Anonymous, 2002), a reality that would make students question whether or not they could even afford to pursue higher education at a public institute.
"As an independent student and as somebody who is not supported by their parents, I would significantly consider whether the education was worth it at that point" (Anonymous, 2002).
At issue was a fourteen percent tuition hike meant to compensate for some seventeen million dollar proposed higher education cuts, which would increase tuition for in-state undergraduate students
between one hundred forty and three hundred dollars per semester (Sudermann et al, 2002). III. WASHINGTONS ECONOMY According to Marga Torrence, policy analyst at Denvers nonprofit Education Commission of
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