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PHOENIX -- Arizona's higher education leaders are demanding more money from students, while also exploring legal options to reduce tuition for some immigrants.

The state's three public universities released tuition proposals Friday calling for increases of up to 5 percent for the next academic year. School officials said the proposed increases were modest amid skyrocketing enrollment and shrinking state funding.

Under the proposals, students at Arizona State University and the University of Arizona could see tuition increase by 3 percent next year, while Northern Arizona University's incoming students are facing a 5 percent tuition hike.

The Arizona Board of Regents will discuss the proposals at a March 27 public hearing, which will include all three universities via videoconference. The board is expected to set final tuition and fee rates for the 2013 academic year when it meets in Tucson in April.

Board chairman Rick Myers said Arizona students would still pay less than students at other comparable universities.

``We are not out of control,'' he said.

The board is also weighing its options to reduce tuition for some immigrants granted legal protections under a new Obama administration policy. Students who are in the country illegally often pay much more to get a college education compared with Arizona residents.

``There clearly is a desire among this board of regents that students who have gone through our high schools in Arizona and live in Arizona need to have access to higher education,'' Myers said. ``There is a sense of urgency to learn more about and to think about what we might do.''

Student leaders said they were not surprised by the proposed tuition increases. Since 2007, tuition and fees for Arizona's public universities have jumped by as much as 96 percent.

``They just do as they desire,'' said Shannon Boruch, a 20-year-old sophomore and a student senator at NAU in Flagstaff.

At ASU, new resident undergraduates would pay up to $9,484, an increase of $276 a year. The Tempe-based school has not released proposals for room and board rates.

In Tucson, resident undergraduate tuition and mandatory fees at UA would cost $10,391 next year, an increase of $356. Students would also see an $80 library fee increase. In all, UA has lost $180 million in state funding since 2008, driving per-student funding to its lowest level since 1967, according to school officials.

Tuition and fees for new resident undergraduate students at NAU would total $9,738 next year, up $467 from 2012. The school offers a guaranteed-tuition plan for incoming freshmen that freezes rates for four years.

Faculty and school leaders said the increases are necessary to ensure a quality education for the state's many new students. ASU has added more than 23,000 students since 2002, while the NAU student body has grown by 5 percent since 2010.

``We need to have this money to continue to offer the services that we have been offering,'' said Allen Reich, a hospitality professor at NAU and chair of the Arizona Faculties Council, which represents professors at the three public universities.

Under Arizona law, immigrant students must provide a green card, indicating permanent residency, to qualify for resident tuition. Students who have been granted deferred action by the Department of Homeland Security are considered lawfully present but do not have lawful immigration status, said Sarah Harper, spokeswoman for the regents. Therefore, they must pay nonresident tuition, Harper said.

Pro-immigration groups, students and professors have also called for reduced tuition for young immigrants.

``I haven't spoken to anyone who is against it,'' Reich said. ``People getting a college degree are always a benefit to society.''

Immigrants protected under the new Obama policy must be younger than 30 and must have come to the U.S. before they turned 16. Roughly 80,000 immigrants in Arizona are eligible, according to state estimates.

Gov. Jan Brewer has said young people in the deferred action program are still in the country illegally and should not receive ``any taxpayer-funded public benefits.''

Some school leaders have ignored Brewer's stance.

Pima Community College and Maricopa County Community College District recently voted to offer reduced tuition for illegal immigrants enrolled in the federal program. The Arizona Board of Regents does not oversee community colleges.

At Pima, the change reduces the cost for full-time enrollment from more than $9,000 to about $2,000 annually.

At Maricopa, school officials recently sought to increase tuition from $76 per credit hour to $81 per credit hour for the upcoming academic year.

In 2011, average debt for undergraduates was $23,800 nationally, compared with about $21,000 in Arizona, according to the College Board, a nonprofit that tracks financial aid and tuition. Nationally, 57 percent of undergraduates at public schools borrowed money, compared with 54 percent in Arizona.

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Cristina Silva can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/cristymsilva

Associated Press,

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11 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
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  • Abuse
    misterosr wrote...
    Am I mistaken
    or did we not pass a State Law that says that only LEGAL residents are to receive State resident tuition breaks or any State funded tuition assistance?
  • Abuse
    misterosr wrote...
    Am I mistaken cont.
    If so, why is the Arizona Board of Regents even considering giving ILLEGAL residents any tuition break? Isn't that just another form of State funded tuition assistance?
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    A tuition increase will decrease enrollment
    at Arizona universities and increase enrollment at community colleges. Gone are the days when you get a quality education at an Arizona university. TA are in the classrooms while professors are not available. Tuition increases such as these will pay for Crowe's 25% pay increase. Crowe is the highest paid idiot at ASU.
  • Abuse
    OneWonders wrote...
    Obama
    peddled to the college kids saying this wouldn't happen and Republicans wanted to raise tuition. Where are ya know Mr. President? Oh wait, I didn't realize he was just talking to illegal immigrants when he said he wanted to fix the problem. I thought he was talking about all students. My bad.
    Equal Justice, Not Social Justice.
  • Abuse
    misterosr wrote...
    Michael Crow
    is number 9 on the top 10 highest paid public universty presidents. If he wants to give tuition breaks to ILLEGAL immigrants let him pay for it out of his pockets and private donations but not one Arizona penny of State tax dollars.
  • Abuse
    RyckAZ wrote...
    I AM SO ANIT-ILLEGAL ALIEN....However
    I know that I hate the fact that because of location and volume that we have illegals up to our eyeballs. However... I am on the fence about this... No I don't think they should get in state tuition, but something in between. Because I do know that we have already spent how many tens of thousands of dollars educating these kids in our elementary and high schools. They took money that was budgeted to educate legal children, so I feel that we are already invested in them. So tie becoming legal to the tuition break. There has to be a happy medium.
  • Abuse
    Truth_hurtz wrote...
    Michael Crow
    Fleecing the public, fleecing the illegals and getting away with it. More students (illegal or not) = more profit in his eyes. That's all he cares about. He could give a crap about their "citizenship plight." All he cares about is popping out those useless arts degrees to naive students who think they're actually getting ahead in life. Sounds just about in line with a crook to me.
  • Abuse
    UZI wrote...
    This is part of the Affirmative Action Law
    Raise tuition for "white" people. Subsidize tuition/books/transportation etc for "minorities". End result: desovled categories of minority/majority (aka 'white), equal treatment, equal job demographics, equal home ownership, equal bank accounts, etc etc etc...
  • Abuse
    SurpriseMe wrote...
    students need to take stand
    Students need to stand up and not register for school. It will freak the school out and they will make adjustments and lower the price. Schools feel they can charge what ever they want because people will pay and those stupid enough to get loans knows they have to continue to go to school or they will have to pay the loan.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    Our Government and Universities share the blame
    Universities raise tuition and the government increases student loans. If the government lowered and capped student loans, Universities would have to lower tuition.

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