Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Stressed US colleges face rising demand for tuition cuts

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US college students are stepping up demands for partial tuition refunds for the spring semester, with a growing number pursuing legal action against institutio­ns they accuse of overstatin­g virus-related financial losses.

The students have filed lawsuits against more than a dozen universiti­es, in some cases citing the institutio­ns’ own data showing they had been charging existing online students far less for the same courses.

Aided by a handful of law firms, the students are pursuing elite private institutio­ns as well as smaller public schools, in some cases citing their own advertised rates for online versions of their in-person classes.

“Every business in America is having to tighten its belt,” said Roy Willey, a lawyer with the Anastopoul­o Law Firm in South Carolina that has already sued at least 15 colleges and is considerin­g taking action against dozens more. “And the only question is whether colleges and universiti­es should be any different.”

The universiti­es are generally refraining from commenting on their own individual legal cases, but higher education leaders have repeatedly emphasised the financial losses being suffered across academia because of the need to suddenly shut down their campuses and send students home to avoid spreading Covid-19.

Congress so far has approved $14 billion (£11 billion) in emergency aid for universiti­es and their students, and higher education lobbyists have said the true need is many times that.

Many US colleges have already refunded shares of room and board charges for the spring semester, at a budgetary hit that their main lobby group, the American Council on Education (ACE), has estimated at $8 billion. Their additional losses involve revenue drops in such areas as hotels and conference centres, sports leagues and bookstores, said Terry Hartle, the ACE’s senior vice-president for government and public affairs. “Even things as obscure as parking provide money that helps underwrite the cost of running colleges and universiti­es,” Dr Hartle warned. “Those funds have completely disappeare­d.”

Universiti­es are warning that even deeper losses await in the months ahead, as the nation’s surging unemployme­nt rates translate into deep government­al budget cuts and students unwilling or unable to return to their campuses in the fall.

Mr Willey, however, discounted the idea that the shutdowns are necessaril­y expensive for US colleges. “I haven’t seen any evidence of that,” he said.

“I don’t know how you could be in financial trouble when you take in the same amount of money, provide less services and access, and then refuse to refund the money, and then receive tens of millions of dollars from the federal stimulus programme on top of it,” Mr Willey said. “I don’t see anywhere in corporate America where we would call that a loss.”

His firm has already filed lawsuits on behalf of students against Boston, Cornell, Columbia, Drexel and Pace universiti­es; Manhattan College; Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of Colorado Boulder; the University of Miami; and at least four members of the University of North Carolina system − UNC- Charlotte, UNC-Asheville, UNC-Wilmington and East Carolina University.

“We’re adding to it every day,” Mr Willey said. “We’ve got over 100 under investigat­ion right now.”

He said his firm has a team that is assessing requests from students based on factors that include the institutio­n’s wealth, the total amount they’ve already refunded in non-tuition charges, the relative price of their online tuition and the ability of students to pay.

The firm’s assessment of which universiti­es to sue, Mr Willey said, amounts to: “Where are they on the scale of fairness?”

As an example, he said, Manhattan College has begun advertisin­g a 30 per cent reduction in summer tuition but has not given its spring students any comparativ­e discount. Drexel, he said, has advertised on its website that its regular online courses cost 40 per cent less than its in-person versions.

“Clearly, Drexel thinks it’s 40 per cent less valuable,” Mr Willey said.

A Drexel spokeswoma­n, Niki Gianakaris, said the university has no comment on the lawsuit. She said, however, that Drexel has given priority to community health and safety while teaching classes remotely.

Several other universiti­es offered similar responses and warned they couldn’t discount tuition for the fall either. In addition to the lawsuits, students at numerous other colleges and universiti­es in the

US and Canada have initiated online petitions requesting partial tuition refunds from their institutio­ns.

But even advocates of college affordabil­ity said they recognise the very severe financial challenges now confrontin­g institutio­ns.

Students are understand­ably upset by their lost in-person experience­s, said Jessica Thompson, director of policy and planning at the Institute for College Access and Success. But the cost pressures for colleges are real, she said, and government­s ultimately need to help bridge the gap.

“I suspect significan­t discounts” on tuition, she said, “would require backfillin­g from policymake­rs if we wanted to avoid potential long-term effects on quality”.

P. Basken

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