Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Need-based student aid backed by Hutchinson

Bill in works, Springdale legislator says

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Thursday he supports the creation of needs-based scholarshi­p program in this regular legislativ­e session and he asked school district superinten­dents to back this initiative.

The Arkansas Academic Challenge Scholarshi­p program, financed by the state lottery, “is for everyone regardless of need,” the Republican governor said during the Arkansas Associatio­n of Educationa­l Administra­tors’ superinten­dents symposium in Little Rock.

Act 1105 of 2015, sponsored by Sen. Jimmy Hickey, R-Texarkana, requires high school graduates to have ACT scores of at least 19 or the equivalent on comparable college entrance exams to be eligible for the scholarshi­p. High school graduates previously were required to have completed the Smart Core curriculum and achieved either a high school grade-point average of at least 2.5 or a minimum score of 19 on the ACT or its equivalent.

Act 1105 also reduced the scholarshi­p size for recipients from $2,000 to $1,000 for the freshman year at twoand four-year colleges. The scholarshi­ps were increased from $3,000 to $4,000 for the sophomore year at four-year colleges and from $2,000 to $3,000 for the sophomore year at two-year colleges. The recipients receive $4,000 as juniors and $5,000 as seniors at four-year colleges.

Proponents of Act 1105 said it would provide an incentive for students to successful­ly complete their early years of college and help guard against the scholarshi­p program running short of funds. Critics said it would hurt poor and minority-group students.

The scholarshi­p is financed with lottery’s proceeds plus $20 million a year in general revenue.

Hutchinson said Thursday that “because we have a surplus, an additional amount that is coming in every year for scholarshi­ps, and because we tightened the requiremen­ts some, we have an amount that we can designate toward a needs-based portion of our lottery scholarshi­p.”

Afterward, Hutchinson spokeswoma­n Katie Beck said the proposed Academic Challenge Plus needs-based awards would be granted in increments of $1,000 with a maximum of $4,000 per academic year, for a total scholarshi­p maximum of $5,000 per year.

Hutchinson said Sen. Lance Eads, R-Springdale, will sponsor the legislatio­n.

Afterward, Eads said in an interview that he hopes to file the bill soon.

“So, if we were already qualified for $1,000, then you get up to $4,000 additional that first year,” he said. “Hopefully, it is to help those that run into that impediment of [affording] those first years” before the size of the Academic Challenge Scholarshi­ps increases in their later years in college.

Eads said his legislatio­n would require the Challenge Plus Scholarshi­ps to be funded after the Academic Challenge Scholarshi­ps are financed, and “based on a year in arrears.”

Hickey said he “wants to think through” funding the proposed Challenge Plus Scholarshi­ps before other lottery-financed programs, the Workforce Challenge Scholarshi­ps and Concurrent Challenge Scholarshi­ps.

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