Kentucky Community and Technical College System
Marketing & Communications: Today's News

Kentucky system kicks off major fund-raising campaign

Financial-aid gap is growing

Tech center tops chamber's wish list

MSU chief supports efforts at MCC campus

 

Community College Times
October 28, 2003

Kentucky system kicks off major fund-raising campaign

Seeking to better serve employers and communities and to change the lives of students, the Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS) on Oct. 20 officially kicked off a multimillion-dollar private fund-raising campaign.

The campaign, called "Fulfilling the Promise," aims to expand access to postsecondary education and workforce training across the state by funding strategically targeted initiatives that address the community and economic development needs of Kentucky.

The major-gifts campaign, which is expected to last approximately five years, will be conducted along 17 tracks - one at the System level, and one in each KCTCS district.

When it is finished, the "Fulfilling the Promise Campaign" is expected to rank as the largest private fund-raising effort ever undertaken by a system of two-year colleges in the nation. The largest such campaign to date - totaling $43 million - was conducted by the Kentucky community college system in the mid-1990s.

The General Assembly merged the community colleges with Kentucky's technical institutions in 1997 to form KCTCS.

KCTCS President Michael B. McCall and KCTCS Foundation Chairman Thomas O. Zawacki announced the campaign during an event hosted at the System Office in Lexington and telecast via interactive TV to the statewide system of community and technical colleges.

"For the motto 'Education Pays' to be true for every citizen, business and industry must thrive in the globally competitive, information-based economy of the 21st century. As a state-assisted institution, KCTCS must supplement its public funds with support from the private sector to fully meet the demands of students and our business, industry and community partners," McCall said.

During the Fulfilling the Promise Campaign, KCTCS and its colleges will solicit major gifts from individuals, companies, foundations and other sources to invest in specific projects such as scholarship endowments, program support, state-of-the-art equipment and technology, faculty-staff development, and new facilities. The fund-raising goal will be announced at a later date.

During the campaign kickoff, McCall announced the first two major gifts received by the System-level campaign: $500,000 from Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Kentucky, to launch the KCTCS Center of Excellence in Automotive Manufacturing; and $320,000 from the Kentucky Colonels to establish a scholarship program that will benefit single, working parents who need assistance to afford a college education.

 

Herald-Leader
November 3, 2003

Financial-aid gap is growing
More students being helped; more turned down too

More Kentuckians are getting financial help to go to college, but at the same time, even more are being denied aid.

That very mixed message is found in a report to be released to lawmakers today.

A scholarship program based on merit appears to be helping more students go to college.

But then there's the bad news: About 61,000 students who applied for basic financial aid from the state were turned down last year.

The conclusion: Burgeoning enrollment and rising tuitions are making it harder for Kentucky students to get the financial help they need. Since 1997, college enrollment has gone up 23 percent, and college costs have risen more than 21 percent.

And it's only going to get worse, leaving lawmakers in a cash-strapped state with some very tough decisions.

"Only 50 percent of our kids go to college compared to 70 percent nationwide," said Joe McCormick, director of the Kentucky Higher Education Assistance Authority. "We are sucking canal water when it comes to kids going to college, but the increasing cost of education means we have to put some serious money on the table if we intend to move off that attendance rate."

The findings on the Kentucky Educational Excellence Scholarship, established in 1998 to help the highest-scoring students go to college, and findings on need-based aid are documented in a report by the Legislative Research Commission, to be released to the Interim Education Committee today.

KEES, as the merit program is known, was created with money from the Kentucky Lottery to give students scholarships of as much as $2,500 a year, based on grades and ACT scores.

The report also looks at the state's financial aid for needy students. The lottery money is divided equally for each program; by 2005, that split will be 45 percent for KEES and 55 percent for need-based aid.

Among other findings in the report:

• Last year, more than $58 million in KEES money was given to more than 56,000 students. Also last year, about $51 million in need-based aid went to about 45,000 students going to public and private universities.

• Although the bulk of KEES money goes to students from low- and middle-income families, wealthier students with better grades and ACT scores get larger average awards.

In 2001-2002, students whose family income was $15,000 to $19,999 received an average award of $780. Those from families with income between $105,000 and $109,999 got an average of $1,216, or 56 percent more.

• Researchers say that although there is not widespread evidence of grade inflation, schools use a wide variation of scales to determine grades. For example, among 182 schools, there were 61 different scales for setting A, B, C, D and F. Because KEES awards are based on letter grades, not numeric grades, students with the same numeric scores can receive very different amounts of money.

• In surveys, teachers and counselors said KEES awards had encouraged more students to go to college. Most respondents said they thought "very few" teachers had felt pressured to adjust grading standards so students could qualify for larger KEES awards.

More need than money

During the upcoming legislative session, lawmakers will have to decide whether to make changes to KEES, such as basing awards on numeric grades instead of letters, or lowering awards because of decreased funds.

However, the biggest decision for them will be how to continue paying not just for KEES, but for the rest of Kentucky's financial-aid programs.

The cost of providing KEES scholarships alone is expected to exceed lottery revenues by $3.3 million in 2005-2006, while the unmet need for income-based financial aid is about $70 million.

Because need-based grants are awarded on a first-come, first-served basis, students who wait too long to turn in their forms may find there's no money left.

"They should find the money other places, like a tobacco tax," said Paul Housholder, a University of Kentucky senior. He benefited from KEES money, but will leave college with some loans. "I think the consensus is that you should go to college, but it's hard to pay for and you get in a lot of debt,"-Housholder said.

According to the Kentucky Higher Education Assistance Authority, graduates of four-year public universities owe an average of $13,500 in student loans.

State's combination unusual

Higher-education advocates are unwilling to say that one form of aid is more important than the other. But for a budget-strapped state, it will be hard to fully finance both merit and need-based aid.

"Kentucky has a really good balance between the two. There are a number of students with need who also receive merit money," said Gary Cox, president of the Association of Independent Kentucky Colleges and Universities.

Students can stack KEES money on top of other aid, which gives them "maximum flexibility," Cox said. "It does encourage them to work hard, but continues to help students with financial need."

That combination of merit and need-based aid is unique among the 23 states with merit scholarships, said McCormick of the Higher Education Assistance Authority.

"We have to make a convincing case to the legislature to appropriate General Fund revenue to both kinds of scholarships," he said. "Poor kids don't have a lobbyist, and poor kids need financial aid to go to college."

The KEES statute allows the Council on Postsecondary Education to adjust KEES awards according to the amount of money available.

State Sen. Vernie McGaha, R-Russell Springs, thinks students and their parents need to understand that current awards could be changed, so it won't be such a shock if lawmakers do have to reduce them. Right now, high school students can look at the amount of money given per letter grade, and calculate how much KEES money they will receive.

"They need to be told up front that the target is a moving one," he said. "Need-based money has been very, very important, and we need to sustain that."

But Sen. Tim Shaughnessy, a Louisville Democrat, said he will oppose any attempts to lower KEES.

"We need more money for KEES and need-based aid, and the reality is we need a new revenue source because I'm not in favor of cutting back."

Shaughnessy said if expanded gambling becomes a reality, the lottery proceeds should be augmented by revenue from such gambling.

But with a new governor looking at a huge budget shortfall, financial aid across Kentucky could face big problems.

Cutting back on either fund would come as a rude shock to students, said Shelly Park, director of financial aid for Eastern Kentucky University.

Last year, EKU received $2.8 million in KEES money for 4,800 students. The school's students are very dependent on need-based aid as well. Park knows several students who didn't receive any need-based aid, leaving them even more dependent on KEES.

"There would be a lot of disappointed students and disappointed parents if they lowered the amounts," Park said.

 

The Messenger
October 30, 2003

Tech center tops chamber's wish list

"It's our turn!"

Those words are not just a slogan on a sticker to a group of local leaders in business, education, government and transportation.

Hoping to capitalize on the west Kentucky attention and fervor shown in the campaign for governor, a 10-point most-wanted list of Hopkins County projects has been formulated to get the attention of state officials come budget time.

The list, approved by the Madisonville-Hopkins County Chamber of Commerce board of directors, has been forwarded to local legislators and both gubernatorial candidates. A similar document was approved about two years ago prior to a session of the General Assembly, with budget constraints precluding funding of a single project, according to chamber Director Lisa Miller.

"We got several complimentary statements in Frankfort about the priorities we identified then," she said. "It seemed only right to draft a plan before the session coming up Jan. 5."

Topping the wish inventory is the construction of an advanced technology/energy center at the north campus of Madisonville Community College, followed by funding for the U.S. 41A widening project near Industrial Drive and location of a Murray State University building in Madisonville.

"It is Hopkins County's turn," Miller said. "We have seen these types of projects in other communities really bolster their economy and improve lives there. It's more than past time Hopkins County received attention."

The funding wish list was created through a meeting involving representatives of MCC, the Kentucky Department of Highways, Hopkins County Schools, economic development officials, and elected officials of cities and county government.

Other projects on the list are extending the widening of Kentucky 70/85 to Madisonville Municipal Airport at Anton; increased funding for public schools in the state and work force programs such as "School to Work"; a Madisonville Municipal Utilities waterline project on Bean Cemetery Road; addition of sidewalks on South Main Street in Madisonville from Mooreland Avenue to Buckner Ridge Lane; the location of the west Kentucky Office of the Governor in Madisonville; and development of the Dawson Springs Tradewater Complex.

Placing the replacement of the Energy & Advance Technology Center at MCC on the list - the current building was built in 1963 - seems to have been a smart move.

Both gubernatorial candidates, Democrat Attorney General Ben Chandler and Republican U.S. Rep. Ernie Fletcher, addressed the proposal this week.

In a phone interview from Louisville Monday, Chandler said his administration would be "absolutely committed" to seeing such a facility constructed.

"Education and job skills are critical to assuring our trained in the latest technology," he said. "With the job situation the way it is in west Kentucky - and all over the state - it's up to us to meet the needs of the state."

Fletcher's comments on the center came Tuesday at a chamber Hot Topic Luncheon speaking appearance. He said a replacement energy/technology center would fit right alongside his goal of promoting clean coal technology, coal bed methane energy initiatives and drawing more auto manufacturing to Kentucky.

"Without technology centers equipped with the best training resources, the people of Kentucky are going to be left behind," Fletcher said. "By having the education resources close at hand, industry responds favorably and people get into well-paying, skilled jobs."

The U.S. 41A project - already an unfunded component of the Transportation Cabinet's Six-Year Road Plan - and the Kentucky 70/85 project are both supported strongly by state Rep. Eddie Ballard and Sen. Jerry Rhoads, both of Madisonville.

The legislators issued a statement of support for the desire to extend the widening of Kentucky 70/85 to the airport over a month ago, highlighting ongoing work at the facility with runway and safety area improvements. The state lawmakers stressed the economic importance of the improvements and how a new highway to the airport would enhance the community's appeal to outside interests.

The widening of U.S. 41A is planned to go to the entrance of the Madisonville Industrial Park at Industrial Drive, just past General Electric.

MSU President Dr. F. King Alexander, speaking to the Madisonville Rotary Club Wednesday, said he fully-supported locating a university building here. He acknowledged much rides on available state revenue.

"I think this certainly could be a viable project for us to do," Alexander said. "We can't do it alone. We need Madisonville to do it and we'll be right there beside you."

The Murray State president said Madisonville ranked second among off-campus site enrollment last year, trailing Paducah's site. Local enrollment for MSU classes is expected to match Hopkinsville's total this year. Christian County has a free-standing MSU academic center and a donated building in Henderson now serves the university's needs there.

 

The Messenger
October 30, 2003

MSU chief supports efforts at MCC campus

The people of Hopkins County will have a lot of influence when it comes to the chances of Murray State University opening a Madisonville campus, university President Dr. King Alexander said Wednesday.

"We certainly know it's on your agenda, and we appreciate very much that it's third on the agenda here," Alexander told the Madisonville Rotary Club, referring to the Top 10 priority list for the General Assembly developed by local leaders. "It is certainly in our plans."

The project depends on new state revenues, he said.

Madisonville is one of MSU's four satellite sites - and the only site without its own building. The other three locations are Paducah, Henderson and Hopkinsville.

"The chances have a lot to do with you," Alexander said. "The people of Hopkinsville lobbied hard ... and worked hard to get that building." In Henderson, the university uses a former public school building in the downtown area.

The local program operates out of an office suite in the John Gray Building on Madisonville Community College's north campus. It currently uses classrooms at MCC and in the public schools.

Alexander praised MSU's collaboration with MCC through its 2+2 programs. These allow students to earn an associate's degree at MCC, then continue taking classes locally towards a bachelor's degree in education and other fields from Murray State.

This relationship "serves as a model for the rest of the state," he said.

"Last year, the number of students here unexpectedly doubled," he said. "The need is so great. The demand is so great."

During Alexander's visit, he also stopped by Hanson Elementary School to observe teachers who graduated from the 2+2 program, met with MCC officials and instructors, and attended a meeting on starting a local MSU alumni chapter.

During the talk to Rotary, Alexander said there is debate across Kentucky and around the world about economic opportunity, and emphasized this is directly tied to education.

"You don't hear a lot of discussion about this," he said. "That's because the baby boomer generation is aging rather rapidly."

Political discussions, instead, have focused on issues such as Medicare and prescription drug coverage for senior citizens, he said.

"We must invest in our children," Alexander said. "As Kentucky has aged even more rapidly than other states, the premium we put on our boys and girls is even more important."

More than $100,000 has been invested in each child by the time they reach high school graduation, he said. That makes it even more crucial to encourage them to stay in this area after college.

"You need to keep these heavy investments you have made so the social and economic investments you have made don't go to other places," he said. "We want them here. We need them here.

"This is indeed a challenge we must all first recognize and must tackle by ensuring our educational opportunities are expanding, not contracting," he said. "That our teachers are good, that our schools are good. ... That is our obligation. The foundation of all economic growth is that education does pay."