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Has Your State Cut Financial Aid for College?

Aug 18
Written by: Taylor
 

We’re all told how important education is before we even begin school.  But in the real world when times get tough, education takes a backseat to other issues for some states’ policymakers. 

The State Budgets Affect Students’ Budgets 

It’s no mystery that the economic downturn is still impacting many states that are trying desperately to balance their budgets. The only problem is it’s now affecting the budgets of college students and their chances of getting a college degree. 
 
While more people are trying to obtain higher education and needing financial aid to do so, states across the country are slashing their college aid offerings in hopes of cutting down deficits. 
However, there are definitely risks to this strategy, the most obvious being that less people will be able to afford to get degrees and our workforce will slip further down the global scale of college educated workers. Less state financial aid will also equate to students having to take on more debt to get through school. 
 
Neither of those scenarios are good for our economy.

What to Expect (or Not Expect) from States Cutting Financial Aid 

Florida

  • Likely to see merit based financial aid provided by the Lottery go down as revenues stall and decline
  • Bright Futures Scholarship changes: no more paying for books, have to pay for classes that are dropped now, have to take 24 credits in a year to renew the scholarship up from 12 credits

Georgia

  • Likely to see merit based financial aid provided by the Lottery go down as revenues stall and decline

Illinois

Massachusetts

  • 10% cut in the state financial aid budget 
  • Mass Grants may drop by $400-500 this coming year

Michigan

Pennsylvania 

Ohio

  • Community college: grants of up to $2,496 for low-income students are gone
  • 2-year for-profit schools: getting rid of grants up to $4,000 affecting 22,500 students
  • 4-year college: 50% plus cut in grants of up to $2,496 for low-income students
  • Private school: no more $640 grants for 58,000 students

Utah

West Virginia 

  • Likely to see merit based financial aid provided by the Lottery go down as revenues stall and decline

Wisconsin 

 

 

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