December 15, 2005Virginia 21 campaignVirginia 21, a young voters advocacy group, announced a campaign Wednesday to persuade the General Assembly to increase funding for higher education. According to current base budget adequacy figures from the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, higher education is underfunded by $377 million. That debt works out to $1,246 per student. As part of the group's campaign, they have set up a petition for students to sign on the internet. Virginia 21 Director Jesse Ferguson said Wednesday that past funding decisions by the General Assembly have correlated with rises in tuition costs. Tuition increases of 15 percent in years past gave way to increases of 9 percent after the General Assembly gave an additional $175 million for higher education. |
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Rhode Island native and Virginia Tech reporter Greg Esposito posts on everyday college life, trends and issues affecting the 35,000-plus students in the New River Valley and beyond.
Tim Thornton, who is old enough to have children attending college, is still taking classes and is still fascinated by colleges, the students who populate them and the bureaucrats who operate them. His reporting beat is Radford University.
West Virginia native Anna Mallory blogs on student life topics at Virginia Tech, Radford University, New River Valley Community College -- and beyond.
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December 15, 2005
Virginia 21 campaign
Virginia 21, a young voters advocacy group, announced a campaign Wednesday to persuade the General Assembly to increase funding for higher education.
According to current base budget adequacy figures from the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, higher education is underfunded by $377 million. That debt works out to $1,246 per student. As part of the group's campaign, they have set up a petition for students to sign on the internet.
Virginia 21 Director Jesse Ferguson said Wednesday that past funding decisions by the General Assembly have correlated with rises in tuition costs. Tuition increases of 15 percent in years past gave way to increases of 9 percent after the General Assembly gave an additional $175 million for higher education.

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