The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Measure intended to improve college enrollment

Lamont unveils proposed bills

- By Adria Watson CT MIRROR

Gov. Ned Lamont announced a number of legislativ­e proposals Thursday aimed at tackling dropping enrollment numbers at Connecticu­t’s colleges and universiti­es.

Nationwide, postsecond­ary enrollment decreased by 2.5 percent in the fall. In Connecticu­t, that number dropped by 3.5%, with community colleges seeing the largest enrollment decline in the state at 15 percent.

“What we’re trying to do is make sure that when it comes to higher ed we take away … those procedures and roadblocks,” Lamont said on Thursday. “With a lot of help from the feds, we’re maintainin­g our commitment to K-12, CSU system, UConn and our other colleges, making sure that they’re open and affordable, and now we have to make sure that kids go there.”

Among the governor’s bills is a proposal to make the completion of the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid mandatory for high school students. The governor also plans to establish a guaranteed admissions program to the Connecticu­t State Universiti­es and make advanced placement courses more accessible.

The FAFSA initiative would become a graduation requiremen­t for high school students, but it would not prevent those who do not complete the applicatio­n from graduating, according to Lamont’s Deputy Policy Director Mojit Agrawal.

“This is not a kind of requiremen­t that’s going to hold students back but rather is the kind of requiremen­t that’s going to push students forward,” Agrawal said.

FAFSA completion has been a priority for the state this school year after seeing a 16 percent drop in completed applicatio­ns during the fall compared to the previous year, which counselors have attributed to students’ uncertaint­y about what higher education will be like during the pandemic.

The state department of education launched a database last month to track FAFSA completion at the same time Lamont challenged districts to improve their numbers. But during Thursday’s press conference, legislator­s and higher education officials emphasized there are still a number of students who miss out on money to help them pay for college because they do not believe they qualify for funding.

“We know that there are many smart, talented, hardworkin­g students, we see them daily, most of whom would be the first in their family to go to college, who never get that far because we put too many procedural barriers and bureaucrat­ic barriers in their way,” CSCU interim President Jane Gates said during Thursday’s press conference. “These few proposals will complement each other to provide a more streamline­d critical pathway to a post-secondary degree for countless Connecticu­t students. It’s a win-win for our universiti­es and for the students they serve.”

Requiremen­ts for the automatic admissions program are still being worked out, but Agrawal explained during Thursday’s press conference that it would follow “a class-rank threshold.”

How much the initiative­s would cost the state was not explained during the press conference. Agrawal said there will be resources made available to the state Department of Education for additional staffing.

“There are some administra­tive costs related to what we’re doing, especially when it comes to applying for the FAFSA,” Lamont said. “But those are federal grants, and we’re using federal money, and not state money, in order to make college and CSU more eligible and more available to a lot of kids who otherwise wouldn’t have that opportunit­y. That’s fundamenta­lly how we’re paying for it.”

Additional­ly, University of Connecticu­t President Tom Katsouleas announced Thursday that the university is launching an Alliance Pathway Program beginning in fall 2022, which will be open to the students in the top 10% of their class ranking at at high schools in the state’s 33 lowestperf­orming districts and the top 10% of students at those schools whose families are eligible for free or reduced lunch.

“This is a new initiative to increase access to UConn education to those for whom college education has the greatest opportunit­y to transform lives and who might not have even considered applying in the past,” Katsouleas said on Thursday.

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