Los Angeles Times

How free tuition will pay off

Re “Free tuition won’t fix college access,” Opinion, Jan. 10

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It’s not surprising that the president of a small liberal arts college in Michigan that charges $41,138 tuition per year would be opposed to the idea of free college tuition.

What is surprising is that the Los Angeles Times would publish such a biased piece from an out-ofstate author whose supposed concern for addressing college affordabil­ity is not reflected in his own practices at Alma College.

In states where community college is tuition-free, the benefits to low- and middle-income families are clear. They have brought more federal dollars in support of higher education into their states through a focus on completion of the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid for Pell Grants, increased postsecond­ary enrollment, and in Tennessee, a double-digit decrease in student loan applicatio­ns.

I look forward to the California Legislatur­e passing and Gov. Gavin Newsom signing AB 2, which will make two years of community college tuition free for full-time, first-time high school graduates. Morley Winograd Arcadia The writer is president of the Campaign for Free College Tuition.

Cost of living is the same, whether one attends a community college or a university. The difference is a few thousand dollars in tuition versus tens of thousands of dollars.

In 1995, UC Santa Barbara tuition was about $1,500 per year. The student population was about 20,000; now, it is about 25,000. Adding those 5,000 students was done at enormous cost, reflected in the skyrocketi­ng tuition increase. But such are the times, and there are numerous pluses as well as the minuses.

The immediate answer is to have students commute to school from home, whereas the longer-term answer, I’m sorry to say, is for parents to have fewer children and make a lot more money. Arthur D. Wahl Port Hueneme

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