Pima Community College is hiking tuition for Arizonans while giving deep discounts to everyone else.

Officials hope the changes will help PCC attract more out-of-state and international students to offset a major enrollment slump at home.

The tuition plan for the upcoming school year, approved Wednesday by a 4-1 vote of PCCโ€™s Governing Board, calls for:

  • A 4 percent hike for in-state students, which would increase their basic tuition by $3 per unit from $75.50 to $78.50.
  • A 14.7 percent cut for international students. Their tuition would drop by $52 from $352 to $300 per unit.
  • A 14.7 percent reduction for out-of-state students who take classes on campus. They, too, would pay $52 less bringing their cost from $352 to $300 per unit.
  • A 40 percent cut in nonresident online tuition. The price per unit would drop from $352 to $210 for savings of $142 per unit.
  • A 50 percent tuition cut for students over age 55, a bid to attract a demographic that normally doesnโ€™t seek out PCCโ€™s credit offerings.

School officials said the new rates will help PCC regroup after losing 28 percent of its full-time equivalent enrollment in the last five years, in addition to losing millions in state funding.

โ€œAll of these (changes) should have a positive impact on enrollment,โ€ said college finance boss David Bea, who recommended the new tuition plan.

Bea couldnโ€™t say how big the impact might be. That will depend on how well the college markets the new rates to prospective students, he said.

PCCโ€™s current tuition rates are โ€œat the high end of the spectrumโ€ for out-of-state, international and online students, Bea said.

As an example, he cited Rio Salado College in Tempe, which offers online courses for $215 per unit while PCC has been charging $352. PCCโ€™s new online rate of $210 will allow it to undercut Rio Salado, Bea said.

Bea said the $3 per unit increase for in-state students was well-received by several student leaders he contacted for feedback.

The $3 increase follows a $5 increase for in-state students that took effect this school year.

Board members who supported the tuition changes said they donโ€™t like the idea of raising rates again for Arizona students, but said the package of changes was necessary to move the college forward.

โ€œIt feels as if weโ€™re somehow balancing the budget on the backs of in-state students. I donโ€™t think thatโ€™s what going on but it certainly has that flavor,โ€ said Demion Clinco, the boardโ€™s District 2 representative.

District 1 board member Mark Hanna, a retired high school guidance counselor, was the lone vote against the changes.

Hanna said no matter how PCC tries to explain it, in-state students are sure to conclude โ€œthat they are paying for the (tuition) reductions for international and out-of-state students.โ€

Tracy Nuckolls, a representative from PCCโ€™s finance and audit committee, told the board the committee supports the tuition changes and believes PCC officials are doing their best in a challenging situation.

โ€œYouโ€™re tackling a very difficult subject at a very difficult time in the collegeโ€™s history,โ€ he said.


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Contact Carol Ann Alaimo at calaimo@tucson.com or 573-4138.