The Standard Journal

College presidents balk at in-state quota

- By Dave Williams, Bureau Chief Capitol Beat News Service

A bill requiring the University System of Georgia to raise the percentage of in-state students offered early admission to the state’s top public universiti­es drew opposition Thursday during a legislativ­e committee hearing.

The presidents of the University of Georgia and Georgia Tech told members of the Senate Higher Education Committee the legislatio­n is unnecessar­y and would lower the standards for admission to the university system’s top campuses.

Senate Bill 282 would require the university system’s four research universiti­es –

UGA, Georgia Tech, Augusta University and Georgia State University – to make sure at least 90% of students offered early admission are from Georgia.

The schools, particular­ly UGA and Georgia Tech, have become increasing­ly hard to get into since the HOPE Scholarshi­p program was created during the 1990s. The lottery-funded program covers all or most tuition costs for qualified students, a strong motivator for the highest achieving Georgia high school students to attend college in state.

“I want to keep our best and brightest kids here,” said Sen. Brandon Beach, R-Alpharetta, the bill’s chief sponsor.

But University of Georgia

President Jere Morehead said the 90% mandate is unnecessar­y because UGA already enrolls a high percentage of in-state students. He said 88% of UGA’s current cohort of undergradu­ates is from Georgia, while in-state students account for 82% of the freshman class.

Morehead also argued the 90% in-state requiremen­t for early admissions would skew UGA’s student population more toward Georgia’s urban and suburban communitie­s because most students accepted early are from metro Atlanta or the Savannah, Augusta or Columbus areas. Consequent­ly, the bill would “disenfranc­hise” rural Georgia students, he said.

Georgia Tech President

Angel Cabrera said the legislatio­n would damage the state’s economy by dissuading out-of-state students from seeking early admission to Tech, which has built a national reputation and competes with prestigiou­s public universiti­es including the University of California-Berkeley.

High achieving out-ofstate students who come to Tech tend to stay in Georgia and provide the backbone for the state’s fast-growing technology industries, Cabrera said.

“Attracting students from out of state is increasing­ly important to our economy,” he said. “They are the reasons companies across the nation are increasing­ly calling Georgia home.”

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