Students stroll the campus of Cleveland State University. Credit: Jeff Haynes / Signal Cleveland

Public colleges would be able to charge students more money under the Ohio Senateโ€™s new budget plan

Current state law requires Ohioโ€™s 14 four-year universities to adhere to a cap on tuition and fee rate increases set by lawmakers for each new first-year class. That amount stays flat for that group for four years, allowing them to plan and pay for classes.  

Under the Senateโ€™s proposal, this cap could rise to 4% for students beginning in the 2025-26 and 2026-27 academic years. The House lawmakers’ budget calls for keeping it at the current rate of 3%. 

Ohioans paid an average of $10,900 in tuition and fees for one year at a state university, according to the most recently available federal data.  

The Senateโ€™s proposal also would impact those attending the stateโ€™s 22 community colleges. The plan would allow schools to increase the amount of money students pay for instructional and general fees by up to $10 per credit hour. Thatโ€™s double the rate Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and House lawmakers each included in their respective budget plans. 

Columbus State Community College, the stateโ€™s largest two-year public, charges about $183 per credit hour. It amounts to nearly $5,500 for a full academic year. 

All three state budget proposals call for boosting the Ohio College Opportunity Grant. That provides money to the stateโ€™s poorest students, which could help offset potential increases. 

Many of the stateโ€™s public colleges continue to deal with enrollment declines, changing demographics, and a shifting public view on higher education  โ€“ all of which can mean fewer tuition dollars flowing into institutions. 

But lots of college students are also dealing with their own financial struggles. Nationwide, the average student at a public university takes out about $32,000 in student loans to pay for a bachelorโ€™s degree. Thatโ€™s nearly four times higher than what graduates owed in 1990.

Now, state senators and representatives must work together to agree on a final version of their combined proposals. Theyโ€™ll then send it to DeWine, who must sign it by June 30.

Senate calls for slight boost to State Share of Instruction 

Getting more money in this budget cycle was a big priority for college leaders. Ohio Department of Higher Education Chancellor Mike Duffey asked university presidents to hold off on any potential tuition increases until lawmakers finalized the budget, according to public records Signal Ohio requested and reviewed. 

โ€œThis kind of action canโ€ฆoffend the sensibilities of the legislature when it occurs before the budget has officially become law,โ€ he wrote in a March 4 letter. โ€œIt typically results in media coverage.โ€ 

The lobbying group backing the stateโ€™s four-year universities specifically asked senators for that 3% tuition cap to be removed. It would help institutions โ€œproperly maintain necessary goods and servicesโ€ amid rising inflation costs, Inter-University Council president and CEO Laura Lanese told lawmakers last month. 

The IUC also wanted an increase in funding through the funding formula called the State Share of Instruction (or SSI). The bulk of taxpayer money public higher education institutions receive is determined through that calculation. Itโ€™s largely based on student outcomes. 

House lawmakersโ€™ budget proposal included a 2% bump โ€“ smaller than the current rate of inflation โ€“ to the SSI. Lobbyists for the universities wanted senators to do the same. State support in Ohio has decreased over the past few decades

In the end, Senate lawmakers chose to give less funding than House lawmakers โ€“ but a higher amount than the governorโ€™s flat year-over-year proposal. 

Linking SSI to Senate Bill 1

State senators also want to tie some of that SSI money to make institutions comply with Senate Bill 1. The new higher education law overhaul requires colleges to end diversity, equity and inclusion (or DEI) work and implement a new mandatory American civics course.

Public institutions are already required to adhere to those rules, though. Many are making changes before the legislation officially takes effect June 27

House Speaker Matt Huffman told reporters Wednesday he supported incentivizing compliance. He said the law โ€œisnโ€™t just about the DEI issues.โ€

โ€œIf the universities aren’t going to apply state law, then there needs to be some incentive to make sure that they do,โ€ he said.ย 

This story was updated to clarify that only the House lawmakers’ budget proposal included a call to cap tuition rates at 3%.

Higher Education Reporter
I look at who is getting to and through Ohio's colleges, along with what challenges and supports they encounter along the way. How that happens -- and how universities wield their power during that process -- impacts all Ohio residents as well as our collective future. I am a first-generation college graduate reporting for Signal in partnership with the national nonprofit news organization Open Campus.