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View Article  College Just Got A Lot Costlier
  College Just Got a Lot Costlier 

By The Progress Report, July 13, 2006

I know many of you read the Progress report already but thought this was worth repeating in case anyone missed it... check out these stats!

On July 1, interest rates on student loans experienced the greatest jump in history, with the variable rate on common Stafford loans shooting up almost two percent for students and graduates. The rate hike comes as a result of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, which was signed into law by President Bush on Feb. 8, 2006 as part of an effort to save the federal government more than $22 billion over the next five years. (By comparison, the Department of Defense spends approximately $8.1 billion a month in Iraq).

In today's global technology and information-driven society, obtaining a college diploma is more important than ever. The average college-educated worker earns about 73 percent more over a working lifetime than a high school graduate, and faces a 40 percent lower risk of unemployment. A college education opens up windows of opportunity, while leaving school prior to earning a post-secondary credential closes doors. But rising costs and shrinking financial aid are making higher education increasingly inaccessible for many Americans. Lack of academic preparation, inability to pay for a full college experience, and economic pressures to seek full-time employment already prevent many students from completing a post-secondary program. The student loan interest rate hikes will only exacerbate the problem.

Putting higher education out of reach

As of last Saturday, the new variable rate for Stafford loans will be 6.54 percent for students and 7.14 percent for graduates. In the 2004-2005 school year, the rates on the same loans were just 2.77 percent for students and 3.37 percent for graduates, and in 2005-2006, the rates were 4.7 percent for students and 5.3 percent for graduates. The interest rate hikes are estimated to add an additional $2,000 in loan payments to the average borrower's debt.

The rate hikes are only the latest blow to students trying to overcome the economic hurdles of earning a post-secondary degree. As a new report by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's (D-MA) office explains, "The cost of attending a public four-year college increased 32 percent between the 2000-2001 and 2004-2005 school years. The cost of attending a private school has also risen considerably -- a 21 percent increase -- and has reached nearly $26,500 a year."

Compounding the problem is the fact that family incomes have not been able to keep up with the exorbitant costs. According to the Kennedy report, "Median family income increased less than six percent" over the same period of time. This fall, Campus Progress will be launching a campaign focusing on the issues of student debt and access to higher education. Click here to sign up for more information.

Help is not on the way

Financial aid has been lagging behind for families in need of help. Federal grants have not kept pace with tuition growth. "While the maximum Pell Grant [which makes it possible for thousands of low-income students to attend college every year] covered 51 percent of the cost of tuition, fees, room and board at a public four-year college during the 1986-1987 school year, it covered only 35 percent of those costs in 2004-2005." As a result, more students are taking out loans to pay for college, leaving them to shoulder a larger debt burden than ever before.

From 1997-2002, the average undergraduate debt rose 66 percent. By another measure, "The average amount of federal student loan debt upon graduation has increased from $8,946 in 1992-1993 to $17,400 in 2003-2004." The debt that students are shouldering is increasingly limiting their career choices. An April 2006 report by the State PIRG's Higher Education Project shows that 37 percent of public four-year college graduates have too much debt to manage as a starting social worker, and 38 percent of private four-year college students would face an unmanageable debt burden as a starting teacher. Furthermore, reports show that students are delaying buying a home and putting off marriage due to educational debt.

One solution advocated by the Center for American Progress is to increase funding for the Pell Grant program so that it covers as much as it did two decades ago -- 50 percent of the average tuition, fees, room and board at four-year, public universities. The funding can be partially obtained by shifting student loans from bank-subsidizing programs to more cost-effective ones.

The expanding achievement gap

The gap in enrollment rates between low-income and high-income groups is distressing. The graduation rate for high-income students is 60 percent higher than the rate for low-income students. It is estimated that between 2001 and 2010, 4.4 million low- and moderate-income academically-qualified students will opt not to enroll in a four-year university, and 2 million of them will forgo college entirely -- all because the cost of a college education is beyond their reach.

American Progress Senior Fellow Gene Sperling has advocated addressing the growing achievement gap by promoting a nationwide educational early-intervention effort through partnerships between private and state universities and local communities. Part of the universities' commitment to long-term early intervention programs would entail offering free tuition to any qualified student admitted from a participating program. In addition, schools should be rewarded with cash bonuses for improving the performance of their disadvantaged students.

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"Should any political party attempt to abolish social security, unemployment insurance, and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history. There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes that you can do these things. Among them are a few Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician or businessman from other areas. Their number is negligible and they are stupid."

----President Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1952-----
View Article  Iowa Blog Roundup
   Iowa Blog Roundup


By Sam Garchik

Lots to say. Campaign season is in full swing, so here we go with the events and notes around the state:

District 1

There is a champagne brunch to honor women on July 22nd at the Teutonic retreat formerly known as "Jumers Castle Lodge," in Bettendorf.  It starts at 10:30. Tix are $35, and the money goes to Elesha Gayman. You can email her at elesha@eleshagayman.com to make a reservation. 

Meanwhile, Elesha was interviewed on the DailyKos. Here's what she said out her plans for office:

"A good 75% or more of people I have talked to have been impacted by a young person they know leaving Iowa. So immediately they have found a way to connect with me and my message. But if young people leaving Iowa are the problem our solution is in three major areas.

- We must work to create and bring quality jobs to Iowa.
- We must work to make health care affordable to all Iowans.
- We must work to remove the cost barriers around higher education."
 
District 2

State House races are heating up in District 2 as well. Mark Nolte (89) is hosting a series of volunteer meetings on Sunday at 5:00 and 7:00 PM. He lives just South West of Iowa City, Off Highway 1, ½ mile west of the 218 overpass.  You can get there by turning north on Kitty Lee Rd and going .75 miles. They are are the green house with the big yard sign on your right.  You can park on the West side of Kittle Lee Rd if the driveway is full.

Clara Olsen (79) is also making waves in the second district. She will join supervisor candidates Esther Dean, Wayne Shoultz and Tom Furlong and our next United States Representative, Dave Loebsack this Sunday when the Muscatine County Democrats ride a trolley in the annual county fair parade. Line up for the parade begins at 1PM at the Muscatine County fairgrounds on the south end of West Liberty. Parade kicks off at 2PM.

Speaking of Loebsack, the campaign has put together a "What's Jim Done," page to let you know just how in step with the GOP Leach is.

And thanks to Iowa underground for showing me this: the Gazette dropped Ann Coulter, proving again they are the best paper in the state.

Final notes from the second: Hungary on Monday in Iowa City? Eat at Thai Flavors, 340 E. Burlington. 20% of the day's profits go to the JC Dems.

District 3

This Saturday, from 9:30 AM to 1200 PM, at the Des Moines Central Library, there will be a public nonpartisan discussion of why people fail to vote or don't become politically active and may not be passing our democratic traditions on to our youth. Join the Conversation!

The event is sponsored by the Des Moines Public Library, Iowa Partners in Learning, and the National Issues Forums Institute.

To RSVP or register, E-mail Committee Chr. Virginia Varce: virv@juno.com  For more information, call David Wilkinson, Chr. at Iowa Partners in Learning (515) 471-8054

If your looking for something to do on Monday in the Mighty Third, you've come to the right place.

Start early at 8:00 AM in Tama at the Anti-FDMA rally, corner of West 3rd and Siegal St.  If you want to camp overnight, contact Cheria Anderson at 641-691-7039. She's at 225 1/2 West 3rd Street, just up the block from the rally.

After the rally, you can drive to Des Moines to check out Evan Bayh, who is speaking at the Pappajohn Center at 1200 Grand Avenue in Des Moines at 1:00 PM that day.

Save your energy because that night, the Progressive Coalition in Central Iowa is meeting at the Des Moines Senior Center on Forest Avenue and MLK Parkway at 7:00 PM. Vern Naffier has been working on this for a while, and although I can not attend, I look forward to receiving a digest and posting the results to the blog.

 
ʉۢ The national debt is growing faster than the economy, which is an unsustainable course.
 
ʉۢ Talk of "cutting the deficit in half" is disingenuous. It ignores the probability that half a deficit is where the progress ends, and that's not good enough. Long-term projections show the budget never coming into balance under current fiscal policies.
 
ʉۢ The annual deficits are far worse than they appear. The true deficit in the government's operations this year will be $473 billion, not the reported $296 billion. A surplus in Social Security revenue makes the deficit appear smaller. When the baby boomers retire and the Social Security surplus disappears, the true magnitude of the deficits will hit home. Nothing is being done to prepare for that day.
 
ʉۢ Now, when the economy is growing, the government should be running a surplus, not piling up record amounts of debt. Borrowing should be reserved for when it is really needed, in bad times, not squandered during good times.
 
ʉۢ Tax cuts do not pay for themselves, and there is no painless way out of the fiscal mess.
 
District 4

I would love for some folks in the fourth to send me stuff on what's going on up there. I know Edwards is coming to speak at your Wing Ding, but I'm looking for more details on campaigns. Email blog2@democracyforiowa.comwith info. Thanks

District 5

Steve King knows how to put together an electric fence. And he thinks immigrants are animals. And his ancestors are from where?

In other news, his efforts for Enlgish Only ballots was stopped. Over 238 members of Congress have more sense than him.

Statewide

Thanks to Political Forecast, who reads Cityview, we now see what's on the Republican Platform:

"In the meantime, the state's Republicans met a couple of weeks ago and, among other things, wrote a new platform. Since we couldn't find mention of it in The Des Moines Register, Civic Skinny rises again to public service by providing some highlights: The Iowa Republican platform would eliminate the U.S. Department of Education; speaks harshly of homosexuals; opposes any minimum wage; favors school prayer and the teaching of creationism; opposes the teaching of sex education; favors English as the official language of the state; opposes the Kyoto treaty; opposes "ethnic history" months in school systems; opposes no-fault divorce; wants marriage defined as exclusively between a man and a woman; opposes a protected class based on sexual orientation; favors drilling in the Arctic national wildlife preserve; opposes the bottle bill; opposes "all forms" of affirmative action; favors the death penalty; opposes amnesty for any illegal immigrants; supports a barrier along the entire length of the Mexico-U.S. border; opposes issuing driver's licenses or providing medical, welfare, or educational support for illegal immigrants and their dependents; favors the right to carry a concealed weapon; supports the repeal of state and federal hate-crimes legislation; supports the reversal of Roe v. Wade; opposes embryonic stem-cell research; opposes euthanasia; opposes abortion; opposes a cigarette-tax increase; favors eliminating the income tax and the Internal Revenue Service and imposing, instead, a consumption tax; opposes the use of tax dollars to support the entertainment and the arts; and commends the "outstanding representation" of, among others, Steve King... among other things."

Meanwhile, Denise O'Brien is getting chunks of money from both Gov. Villsack and . . . Mark Warner. He gave her 10k. It's great for Denise to have the money, for sure. Does this mean that Edwards and all the other folks now have to match it? Thanks to Political Madman for this update.

Finally on to the humor.

Buzz Lightyear continues to deny any link to Jim Nussle's campaign, particularly in the wake of Nussle's poor report card.

And can you believe the guy running this ad should have been our VP? Senator Lieberman, have you no shame at last?

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