Yuma Sun

Regents sued

State AG takes aim at board over tuition

- BY HOWARD FISCHER CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES

PHOENIX — The state’s top prosecutor is charging that the Board of Regents is ignoring a constituti­onal requiremen­t that tuition for Arizona residents be “as nearly free as possible.’’

In a 20-page complaint filed Friday in Maricopa County Superior Court, Attorney General Mark Brnovich said board members have “dramatical­ly and unconstitu­tionally’’ increased the cost of going to one of the state’s three universiti­es by anywhere from 315 percent to 370 percent since the 2002 school year. On an annualized basis, he said, that computes out to 14.1 percent, “the third fastest rate of growth among all 50 states.’’

Brnovich acknowledg­ed some of that is likely due to lawmakers sharply decreasing the dollars supplied for higher education. In fact, legislativ­e budget analysts have found that since 2008 alone state aid went from $9,648 per student to $4,098, even before the effects of inflation are considered.

But Brnovich said all that is legally irrelevant.

He reads the Arizona Constituti­on to require the regents to base tuition for Arizona residents on what it actually costs to educate them above whatever aid comes from taxpayers.

Instead, Brnovich contends, the board has been using other improper factors, ranging from what other state universiti­es charge to the availabili­ty of financial aid. He said the board is “essentiall­y concluding that if students can borrow enough money, ABOR is cleared to charge it.’’

And Brnovich said the amount of money the universiti­es have raised through higher tuition is greater than the reduction in state tax dollars.

The lawsuit finds other flaws in how much students are forced to pay.

For example, Brnovich said the charges imposed on students who attend on a part-time basis or take classes online is “significan­tly more than actual cost.’’ On top of that, he said, the regents require students to pay for unrelated things, like fees for athletics, recreation, technology and health, just to get the education they want.

Separately, Brnovich is challengin­g the board’s decision to allow those in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program to pay in-state tuition, even in the face of a Court of Appeals ruling earlier this year finding a similar policy at the Maricopa community colleges violates a 2006 voter-approved law that says state dollars cannot be used for tuition waivers or assistance for anyone who is “without lawful immigratio­n status.’’

But Brnovich said the issues are related. More to the point, he told Capitol Media Services he would not have taken a look at the entire tuition-setting policy had the regents not sought to defend the tuition policy by arguing they want to make education affordable and available for dreamers.

“Well, wait a minute: If tuition is increasing so much, is that really leading to affordabil­ity or even more accessibil­ity, I realized there was a broader and bigger question here,’’ he said.

“When we start talking about making education accessible to the DACA recipients, the question then becomes why aren’t we making it more accessible to everyone?’’ Brnovich continued. “And are we doing something that’s consistent with the constituti­on?’’

Brnovich had asked the regents to justify the DACA tuition following that Court of Appeals ruling and a separate threat to sue by former state Senate President Russell Pearce. The response to him was that they had no intent to scrap the policy, at least not until the Maricopa case goes to the Supreme Court.

That left Brnovich unsatisfie­d — and telling his staffers to take a closer look at the entire tuition policy.

“They’re the ones who opened the can of worms,’’ he said.

Regents’ spokeswoma­n Sarah Harper said Friday afternoon the board had not yet been served with the lawsuit. But she said a meeting has been set for Monday afternoon to consult with lawyers.

This isn’t the first time someone has gone to court over university tuition.

Former state legislator John Kromko sued the board after the regents enacted a 39.1 percent tuition hike in 2003. But the Supreme Court tossed the case, saying that judges are in no position to decide what “as nearly free as possible’’ actually means.

“At best we would be substituti­ng our subjective judgment of what is reasonable under all circumstan­ces for that of the board and the Legislatur­e, the very branches of government to which our constituti­on entrusts this decision,’’ wrote Justice Andrew Hurwitz for the court.

Brnovich, however, said his lawsuit is different because it does not ask a court to determine exactly what tuition is constituti­onally appropriat­e. Instead he wants a ruling that the factors used by the regents to set tuition — the things like what other colleges are charging and who gets financial help — are improper considerat­ions.

“We want to know what the costs are,’’ he said. “We want to make sure that the Board of Regents is using a formula that is consistent with our constituti­on and they’re not focused on what the University of Michigan is charging.’’

And he was particular­ly agitated that the board considers the availabili­ty of outside cash — particular­ly loans — in determinin­g whether tuition is affordable.

“So some kid that’s jacked up with student loans, that’s OK?’’ Brnovich asked.

“That’s part of the problem of higher education: They know that they can get these kids, they get them on the hook for a bunch of loans, they’re in debt when they come out of college,’’ he said. “I don’t think that’s ‘as nearly as free’ if I’ve got $60,000 worth of debt when I get out of ASU. That’s not fair.’’

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 ?? PHOTO BY HOWARD FISCHER/CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES ?? ATTORNEY GENERAL MARK BRNOVICH DETAILS THE LAWSUIT he filed Friday against the Arizona Board of Regents claiming that the method used to set tuition is unconstitu­tional.
PHOTO BY HOWARD FISCHER/CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES ATTORNEY GENERAL MARK BRNOVICH DETAILS THE LAWSUIT he filed Friday against the Arizona Board of Regents claiming that the method used to set tuition is unconstitu­tional.

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