Ithaca College Ithaca College News
March 15, 1999 Volume 21, No. 12

Letter to the Governor

Editor’s Note: The following letter was sent by President Peggy R. Williams to New York State governor George E. Pataki, addressing the impact of the governor’s proposed budget on Ithaca College and its students. She urges parents who are residents of New York to express their concerns on this issue as well to Governor Pataki and members of the state legislature.

As president of Ithaca College, I see the good things that result when deserving students receive financial assistance for their higher education ambitions. An administrative team at Ithaca College has examined the potential impact of your budget on students attending Ithaca. It is clear from their analysis that your proposals would seriously undermine those ambitions of New Yorkers that you so lauded in your "State of the State" address, and in doing so would severely harm the future of Ithaca College. I am writing to express to you my objection to cuts to higher education proposed in your budget and to communicate to you my concerns, both for my institution and for the students who rely on the support of New York State for access to higher education.

The most egregious example involves modifications to the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP), a need-based financial aid program that has given millions of New Yorkers the means to a college education since its inception in 1975. We estimate that the change in the TAP funding eligibility formula, to use federal adjusted gross income (AGI) rather than New York State net taxable income, would eliminate TAP aid for 433 of Ithaca’s students (31 percent of our TAP recipients) and significantly reduce TAP aid for another 843 of our students. The proposed 15 credit-hour rule, besides being an administrative nightmare for our financial aid office, would most affect those students for whom flexibility is an important factor in program planning and those who face personal crisis in their lives. What rationale can there be for removing or reducing state support to these students?

While you have proposed level funding for other program areas, it is important to note that New York State budget appropriations have yet to fully restore funding to the Bundy Aid program. Similarly, state funding for the highly successful Higher Education Opportunity Program (HEOP) has been held constant for so long that the burden of cost has been shifted almost entirely to participating colleges like Ithaca.

There is, indeed, much that can be done to eliminate wasteful spending in the state budget. I would ask, however, that you please reconsider the proposed cuts to higher education programs and consider instead the long-term benefits to New Yorkers of expanding the state’s investment in their access to higher education. I urge you to raise the maximum TAP award from $4,125 to the desired $5,000 mark, to continue to base TAP eligibility on New York State net taxable income, to drop the proposed 15-credit requirement, to commit to full funding of the Bundy Aid program at the statutory level, and to fund HEOP at the increased level proposed by the Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities. Please revive the partnership with New York’s higher education institutions and help New Yorkers realize their dreams and ambitions by investing in New York’s future.

Yours truly,

Peggy R. Williams

Peggy R. Williams

President of Ithaca College

 

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