TBR approves MTSU tuition increase



Gallatin, Tenn. — The Tennessee Board of Regents voted Friday unanimously to approve the tuition increases recommended by the Committee on Business and Finance at its June 8 meeting.

Next year’s tuition will increase 6.3 percent or less for more than 72 percent of university and community college students, with the remaining students paying more because they are taking more hours. Technology center students, who are charged per trimester rather than based on hours of instruction, will see a per trimester increase of $112 over last year.

The tuition increases are aimed at recovering only 80 percent of lost state funding and inflation costs and are designed to ensure that increases in tuition and mandatory fees combined for students taking 15 hours (the number of semester hours necessary to graduate in four years) are under 10 percent. These students will see a total increase ranging from 6.1 percent at Austin Peay State University to 8.2 percent at the community colleges.

The attached charts show how much the hourly rate will be at each affected institution and how much students at each level of hours will pay compared to last year. The Business and Finance Committee has met four times since the first of the year to discuss tuition from a variety of perspectives, a process that culminated in its June 8 vote to recommend the increases approved today by the full board.

Over the past three years, the TBR system has lost 25 percent of its state funding, almost $186 million. While numbers at specific institutions vary, the university sector has lost 29.7 percent of its state funding, the community colleges 20.8 percent, and the technology centers 15 percent. All institutions have undertaken budget reduction measures, but a tuition increase has proven to be unavoidable. Given the decision to replace only 80 percent of the reduced state funding with tuition, institutions will have to continue reducing spending and will have fewer dollars per student to spend. Enrollment is expected to continue to increase significantly; in the community college sector, for example, enrollment was up 16.9 percent in fall 2009 compared to fall 2008, and current projections for fall 2010 are for another 13.1 percent increase.

The Tennessee Board of Regents is the nation’s sixth largest higher education system, governing 45 post-secondary educational institutions. The TBR system includes six universities, 13 two-year colleges and 26 technology centers, providing programs in 90 of Tennessee’s 95 counties to more than 180,000 students.