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National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators
The State of Student Aid
NJASFAA Conference
Slide 1 © NASFAA 2011
Once we considered education a public expense, we know now it is a public investment.
—Lyndon B. Johnson
Agenda1. Washington Political Climate
2. Trends in Financial Aid
3. Predictions for Future Funding
4. Campus Impact/Takeaways
5. What’s Going on at NASFAA?Slide 3© NASFAA 2011
Washington Political Climate
Political Climate
Three climate drivers:
1. Partisanship & Brinkmanship
2. Budget Politics Dictating Policy
3. Election Season has Begun
Slide 5© NASFAA 2011
Slide 6© NASFAA 2011
Budget, Budget, Budget
Slide 7© NASFAA 2011
DeficitReduction
FY 2011 FY 2012
Debt Ceiling
Budget, Budget, Budget
Slide 8© NASFAA 2011
PUBLIC SAYS DON’T TOUCH EDUCATION!
YouGov Poll
We’ve ALREADY Taken our Fair Share
Student Aid Cuts
Elimination of Year-Round Pell
Elimination of Graduate Student Interest Subsidy
Elimination of LEAP
0.2 Percent Across-the-Board Cuts
Sunsetting of ACG/SMART
*Future: Next year interest rate rises to 6.8 percent
Budget & Appropriations 101What is supposed to happen…
President releases budget in February
House & Senate pass Budget Resolution in April
Appropriations Committees draft bills
Appropriations bills voted on and passed before Oct. 1
Slide 10© NASFAA 2011
Budget & Appropriations 101But what usually happens…
Omnibus spending bill—combines all 12 spending bills into one
Continuing resolution (CR)
Slide 11© NASFAA 2011
FY 2011, in ReviewCongress passed long-term CR,
4/14/2011
Major Student Aid Provisions◦ Maximum $5,550 Pell Grant award for award year
2011-12
◦ Elimination of Year-Round Pell (crossover reg lifted for summer 2011)
◦ SEOG cut by $20 million; cuts to TRIO, GEAR UP
◦ 0.2 percent cut across-the-board
◦ Eliminate LEAP, Byrd Scholarships Slide 12© NASFAA 2011
Budget Control ActResult of “debt ceiling”
negotiations
Congress passed on Aug. 2
Two stage process:◦ $1 trillion in deficit reduction through spending
caps; $900 billion debt ceiling increase
◦ Establishment of “Super Committee” to come up with additional $1.2 trillion in cuts before end of calendar year
Slide 13© NASFAA 2011
Budget Control ActMain provisions for student aid:
◦ Eliminate in-school interest subsidy for graduate students
◦ Eliminate Direct Loan repayment incentives
◦ Provide $17 billion for Pell Grants for FYs 12 and 13
The math:◦ BCA Pell funding reduces FY 12 shortfall to $1.3
billion, down from $11 billion. Also will provide some additional Pell funding for FY 13
◦ $4.6 of the savings went toward deficit reductionSlide 14© NASFAA 2011
Budget Control ActThe “Super Committee”
◦ Bipartisan, bicameral
◦ 12 members, 2 co-chairs
◦ Must come up with $1.2 trillion in cuts by December, if not an automatic across-the-board cutting mechanism—sequestration—goes into effect
◦ Committee has begun deliberations
Slide 15© NASFAA 2011
FY 2012
FY 2012 fiscal year began 10/1
Neither House or Senate completed their 12 spending bills
◦ Both chambers put forth Labor-H bills
CR passed to temporarily fund government through November 18
Slide 16© NASFAA 2011
FY 2012Senate Labor-H spending bill
◦ Provides maximum $5,550 Pell Grant
◦ Eliminates interest subsidy during grace period
Saves $2.43 billion over five years, this would plug remaining $1.3 billion Pell shortfall
◦ Level funding for all other student aid programs
◦ Bill marked-up and approved by entire Appropriations Committee
Slide 17© NASFAA 2011
FY 2012House Labor-H spending bill
◦ Provides maximum $5,550 Pell Grant
◦ Limits eligibility to 6 years
◦ Revoke Pell eligibility for less than half-time
◦ Eliminate Ability to Benefit option
◦ Reduce student income protection allowances (IPA)
Slide 18© NASFAA 2011
FY 2012House Labor-H spending bill,
con’t.
◦ Reduce auto-zero income threshold
◦ Reduce minimum award
◦ Reinstate previously excluded forms of untaxed income
◦ Bill dropped but not marked-up or approved by Committee
Slide 19© NASFAA 2011
What next???Minibus spending bill likely
◦ Will combine, or “bundle”, 2-3 appropriations bills into one
◦ Both House and Senate Labor-H bills will serve as starting points for negotiation
◦ Recent Updates
◦ ***Important to remember*** Super Committee negotiations will be going on simultaneously and could very easily impact any FY 12 bill
Slide 20© NASFAA 2011
Takeaway: Student aid is caught up in a much larger political dysfunction & ideological impasse.
Takeaway: Student aid changes will likely continue to come through the budget process
Takeaway: Everything is still “on the table” and there very well could be some additional student aid changes into the next year
Takeaway: The maximum Grants ($5,550) appears to be in pretty good shape for the immediate future, although there is still a risk
Advocacy and You
What is Advocacy?
1. To recommend or support publicly
2. A person who upholds or defends a cause; supporter
3. A person who intercedes on behalf of another
Slide 26© NASFAA 2011
What is Advocacy?
1. Lobbying v. Advocacy
2. You don’t need to be in DC to be an effective advocate
Slide 27© NASFAA 2011
What is Advocacy?
Advocacy is proactive AND reactive
Slide 28© NASFAA 2011
Why Does NASFAA Advocate?
The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) supports the training, diversity, and professional development of financial aid administrators; advocates for public policies and programs that increase student access to and success in postsecondary education; and serves as a forum for communication and collaboration on student financial aid issues.
Slide 29© NASFAA 2011
Why Does NASFAA Advocate?
Our advocacy efforts center around these major policy areas:
Increasing access to higher education, including early awareness and outreach
Simplifying student aid systems Encouraging college persistence & completion College savings and financial education Minimizing student indebtedness and emphasizing grant
and work aid Supporting the primacy of need-based aid
Slide 30© NASFAA 2011
NASFAA Advocacy Tools
LettersStatementsTestimonySocial MediaEducational MaterialsCoalitions & PartnershipsHill Visits
Slide 31© NASFAA 2011
NASFAA Advocacy Examples
Letter to Super Committee Administrative Cost Allowance One-Pager Elimination of Crossover Regulation for Summer 2011 National Profile & Congressional Staff Orientation Recent Budget Bill Hill Visits Save Student Aid Facebook Page Budget Center Committee for Education Funding & Student Aid Alliance Participation in Award Letter Discussions
Slide 32© NASFAA 2011
Advocacy and You Visit our Facebook Page!
Write letters to your delegation and to Super Committee members
Get students involved!
Visit our “Take Action” page and “Budget Center” to stay up to date on legislative news
Use our tools as examples
Slide 33© NASFAA 2011
Advocacy and You Build relationships with your lawmakers now by delivering
information sheets on how their constituents—the students and families you serve—benefit from the student aid programs.
Follow the latest legislative developments by reading Today’s News, the NASFAA Advocate, and following us on the NASFAA Facebook page and the Save Student Aid Facebook page.
Share with NASFAA all your correspondence with lawmakers so we can support you and understand how to better work with your Congressional delegates.
Visit NASFAA’s “Take Action Page” to stay up-to-date on NASFAA’s latest calls to action Slide 34© NASFAA 2011
Advocacy and You Visit our Facebook Page!
Write letters to your delegation and to Super Committee members
Encourage your students to do the same
Visit our “Take Action” page and “Budget Center” to stay up to date on the latest news and to learn about ways for you and your campus to get involved Slide 35© NASFAA 2011
Other than the Budget…
Award Letter Conversations
Several Research Projects
Reauthorization
Forum
Slide 36© NASFAA 2011
Question and Answer Segment
Questions?
mccleanm@nasfaa.org.
Slide 37© NASFAA 2011
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