Boston Sunday Globe

College to offer two years tuition-free to R.I. residents

- By Alexa Gagosz GLOBE STAFF Alexa Gagosz can be reached at alexa.gagosz@globe.com.

PROVIDENCE — Hours after Governor Dan McKee signed the state budget that included funding for a pilot program to provide free tuition for instate residents who have exhausted other financial aid, leaders at Rhode Island College said Friday that they would begin awarding the scholarshi­p immediatel­y this fall.

The Hope Scholarshi­p will make the final two years of a four-year bachelor’s degree at Rhode Island College, a state public school, tuition-free for state residents who meet the criteria.

”Despite being the most affordable [four-year] college, the number one reason why students drop out is because of the cost,“said John Taraborell­i, a Rhode Island College spokesman.

Students must commit to living, working, or continuing their education in Rhode Island upon graduation to be considered. It’s unclear how the school might keep track of this data, but the overwhelmi­ng majority of the college’s students are already state residents. Most of the students also come from lower-income background­s.

A source at the college with close knowledge of the scholarshi­p said a student would not have to repay any part of the scholarshi­p if they do move away from Rhode Island after graduation.

Dr. Jack Warner, president of Rhode Island College, said the scholarshi­p is a tool in building an educated workforce to “drive Rhode Island’s economic future.”

The legislatio­n funds a fiveyear pilot to create an earned merit, last-dollar scholarshi­p that will close the gap after students in their junior and senior years have exhausted all other forms of financial aid.

The pilot program was included in the state’s Fiscal Year 2024 budget, which was passed by the General Assembly minutes before 2 a.m. on June 16. McKee signed the budget that day on the State House grounds.

The scholarshi­p will be available to both new and current RIC students, as well as some adult students. Recipients must be enrolled full-time, have declared a major, and maintained a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.5. The students must also have completed at least 60 credits.

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