May 23, 2012

President Obama brings college tour to the University of Iowa

President Obama is scheduled to deliver a speech at the University of Iowa Field House at 1:20 this afternoon. He’s expected to deliver a similar message that he sounded Tuesday with addresses at the University of Colorado and the University of North Carolina.

“Tell them now’s not the time to double your interest rates on student loans,” Obama said. “Now’s the time to double down on the investments in a strong and secure middle class.” The interest rate on federally-subsidized Stafford student loans is scheduled to increase on July 1 from 3.4% to 6.8%.

President Obama is calling for congressional action to maintain the rate at its current level. University of Iowa Financial Aid Director Mark Warner says it’s important for interest rates to stay as they are so students have an affordable monthly rate.

“There are more challenges, I think, given the state of the economy, even though we’re improving slowly, but it still creates some challenges, I think, for students to repay their loans when they’re assuming other costs after graduation,” Warner said. The scheduled rate increase to 6.8% would impact about 7 million undergraduates. The White House reports it would raise costs by about $1,000 a person.

Prior to his speech, President Obama is meeting with five University of Iowa students to discuss his plan to hold down interest rates. The White House identified the students who are participating in the panel discussion as Myranda Burnett, a junior from Burlington; Blake Anderson, a junior from Eldridge; Jordan Garrison-Nickerson, a sophomore from West Des Moines; Marissa Boles, a senior from Melcher-Dallas; and Martin Lopez, a sophomore from Nichols.

All five students are using Stafford loans to help pay for their education.

By Jill Kasperie, KCRG-TV, Cedar Rapids

The Obamas are coming, today & tomorrow

First Lady Michelle Obama is due in Iowa later today and President Obama will be in Iowa City tomorrow – visits that highlight Iowa’s status as a “swing” state that could help decide who wins the 2012 presidential race.

Michelle Obama plans to meet with campaign volunteers in Des Moines late this afternoon, then speak at a campaign fundraiser. President Obama’s visit to the University of Iowa is meant to highlight his push to maintain current interest rates on government student loans. Senator Tom Harkin, a Democrat, was asked to speak Monday on a conference call arranged for reporters by the Obama reelection campaign.

“Keeping college affordable is a critical part of the president’s blueprint for an economy that’s built to last,” Harkin said.

According to Harkin, 72 percent of Iowa college graduates have student loan debt and the average amount of debt is 30-thousand dollars — the third highest student loan debt load in the country. The interest rate on government student loans is currently 3.4 percent, but it is scheduled to double on July 1st, to 6.8 percent. 

“This is unacceptable, especially at this very tenuous time in our economy,” Harkin said. “It’s why President Obama is traveling this week to the University of North Carolina, the University of Colorado and the University of Iowa to speak out on this issue.”

Those three states are also key battlegrounds in the fall election. Vice President Joe Biden, Obama’s 2012 running mate, visited Iowa twice in March. Mitt Romney, the Republican Party’s likely presidential nominee, last visited Iowa on January 3rd, the day of the Iowa Caucuses.

Digital scrapbooks of Grant Wood’s life available online

Letters, articles, and photographs detailing the life of Iowa’s most famous artist are now available online. The Figge Art Museum in Davenport and University of Iowa Libraries have joined forces to digitize scrapbooks Nan Wood Graham compiled about her brother, Grant Wood.

The Figge’s Andrew Wallace says now anyone, anywhere in the world, can study Wood’s life, without having to travel to Iowa. “And all those clippings give you an excellent view into life in the 1930′s particularly, and sort of the local reaction to their celebrity artist son in Cedar Rapids and Iowa City,” Wallace says.

Wallace says they began scanning the scrapbooks about five years ago when it became obvious they were in dire need of conservation.

“That is largely due to the materials which Nan used to put them together — which anybody would have used — which would be a commercially available scrapbook, Wallace explains. “Using cellophane scotch tape, rubber cement or things like that which conservators have found over time begin to degrade the materials to which they are attached.”

Nan Wood not only kept scrapbooks chronicling her brother, she was also the model for the woman in his famous American Gothic painting. The Grant Wood Archive at the Figge has provided key material for numerous catalogs and articles through the years, and most recently for the 2010 biography by R. Tripp Evans, “Grant Wood – a Life.”

For access to the archive, go to the museum’s website:www.figgeartmusem.org.

GOP lawmakers question “tuition set aside” program at Iowa, ISU, UNI

Republicans in the Iowa House are raising questions about a policy that takes a portion of the tuition students pay to attend the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa to provide scholarships to other students. Representative Scott Raecker, a Republican from Urbandale, has been in the legislature since 1999, but Raecker said he just learned about this long-standing policy in the past few months.

“Twenty-four percent of the tuition paid by a student at the University of Iowa goes to subsidize other students’ (scholarships); 18.6 percent at the Iowa State University and 15.3 percent at UNI,” Raecker said recently during a House Appropriations Committee meeting. “That total is just over $143 million of tuition payments by students that are being used to off-set scholarship of other students rather than to pay for their own education.”

A policy set back in 1989 by the board that governs the three public universities in Iowa requires the schools to set aside a portion of the tuition payments from in-state students to provide scholarships to other students, based on need. According to University of Iowa student body president Elliot Higgins, 20 percent of the undergrads on the Iowa City campus get scholarships from that pot of tuition money paid by other students.

“While we have a record number of students, the cost of higher education is becoming more difficult to pay for; 3900 undergraduate students receive needs-based scholarships every year, funded through our university set aside funds,” he said late last week during a news conference in the statehouse.

This year, more than 25,o00 students at the three universities got scholarships from the money set aside from the tuition other students paid. Representative Raecker suggests the parents and students who pay that tuition should probably get a charitable deduction on their income taxes for that portion of the tuition payment.

“Ask the constituents in your district if they were aware, with the tuition they’re paying at the universities, if that money is going to more than just the cost of their education, but to off-set the cost of other education,” Raecker said last week during House debate.

Many other states have the same system. In Texas, for example, at least 20 percent of the tuition students pay to attend public universities in that state is set aside to provide scholarships.

“This is a common practice and policy,” Raecker said. “But it is a policy that we, as legislators, at the least need to make sure is disclosed to those paying the bills.”

The presidents of Iowa’s three public universities have promised to disclose on tuition bills the amount that is set aside to provide scholarships for other students.

Iowa currently ranks third lowest among the 50 states in providing scholarship support so low-income students can attend a public university. For the past three years, Iowa legislators haven’t provided any state money for work-study programs on the campuses.

Governor, students from U-of-I, ISU & UNI to rally tonight

Governor Branstad, a graduate of the University of Iowa, will join students from Iowa, Iowa State and UNI this evening at a rally on the state fairgrounds. Greta Johnson, a University of Northern Iowa student, is the student-member of the board that governs the public universities and she’s part of a new group called “Universities for a Better Iowa” that will host tonight’s rally.

“Please join us as we share how vital these universities are and how they deserve public support,” Johnson said last Thursday during a statehouse news conference. “Hear students and alumni share personal stories about the value and impact of the public universities and learn how you can help protect them.”

The event is designed to increase public pressure on Republicans in the Iowa House who’ve voted to cut state support of the universities by $31 million. Elliot Higgins of Ottumwa — the student body president at the University of Iowa — said the students will do more than just rally tonight in Des Moines. They plan a public relations blitz of speaking engagements around the state as well.

“At each stop across the state, students will present their personal stories and share why Iowa’s public universities are valuable not only to us, but to Iowa’s economy,” Higgins said.

According to University of Northern Iowa student body president Spencer Walrath, every dollar the state invests in higher education yields a $14 return in economic activity in the state.

“There is no better investment that the state can make in its future,” Walrath said.

Iowa State University student body president Dakota Hoben of Grandview, Iowa, called higher education an investment, not an expense.

“We have always said that our state’s most precious resource is its human capital,” Hoben said. “Today we are advocating for just that — an investment in our human capital.”

The students cite a recent report showing state support of the three universities has fallen 40 percent in the past decade.

The top Republican in the Iowa House said Friday ”it isn’t outrageous” to suggest the universities see a reduction in state support next year as well. House Speaker Kraig Paulsen has met with each of the university presidents in the past week and Paulsen said he’s encouraged by some of the things he’s hearing from them.

“However, the institutions themselves still seem to have a kind of entitlement attitude and you don’t just get to show up at the legislature say, ‘We want this much money,’ and we just blindly write a check,” Paulsen said. “…We’re stewards on behalf of the taxpayers of Iowa. It’s going to have to be explained to us.”

Paulsen, a graduate of Iowa State University and the law school at the University of Iowa, made his comments this weekend during an appearance on the Iowa Public Television program, “Iowa Press” (watch the video/read the transcript here).

Students launch “Universities for a Better Iowa”

I.S.U. President Steven Leath speaks at a rally at the state capitol.

Students from Iowa’s three public universities are launching a public relations campaign — and they hope a rally in Des Moines on Monday will send a signal to Republican legislators who’ve called for a reduction in state support of the schools.

Iowa State University president Steven Leath suggests the personal stories of students are more persuasive than appeals from university administrators.

“We’ve told legislators so often that they’re probably tired of hearing it from us,” Leath said this afternoon. “Now they need to hear it from you, from your own mouths, in your oen words, on why you went to UNI or the University of Iowa, Iowa State.”

Leath spoke during a statehouse rally planned by student leaders from the campuses in Ames, Cedar Falls and Iowa City.

University of Northern Iowa student body president Spencer Walrath delivered this message to lawmakers: “It is imperative that the people of Iowa and, more to the point, the people in this building recognize the incredibly valuable service that our public universities provide to our state.”

The student leaders have formed “Universities for a Better Iowa” and they’re inviting graduates of the three public universities to join students and Governor Branstad at Monday’s 5 p.m. rally on the state fairgrounds.

“Though we may be rivals on the athletic field, today we stand united,” said Dakota Hoben, student body president at Iowa State University.

University of Northern Iowa student Greta Johnson is the student-member of the board that governs the three universities. She described “Universities for a Better Iowa” as a grassroots movement.

“The opportunities for our students to receive a world-class education are in jeopardy and so are the opportunities for Iowa,” Johnson said.

Republican Governor Terry Branstad has proposed increasing state taxpayer support of the three public universities by $23 million in the next budgeting year. His fellow Republicans in the House propose a $31 million reduction.

Debate over state support of public universities

A legislative hearing about shutting down the University of Northern Iowa’s laboratory school for student teachers evolved into a debate about declining state support of UNI, the University of Iowa and Iowa State University. Senator Sandy Greiner, a Republican from Keota, said she’s been “stunned” by the positive reaction from her constituents to the cuts at UNI.

“To a T, what I’m hearing from these people is, ‘Thank God we finally got somebody with the intestinal fortitude to grab the bull by the horn and do what needs to be done,’” Greiner said.

Senate President Jack Kibbie, a Democrat from Emmetsburg, said he “doesn’t know why” Iowans don’t want to “invest” in the state universities.

“Iowa is one of the (most) well-off states in the nation and why we’re whacking away at public education budgets at every level I don’t understand,” Kibbie said.

Senator Kent Sorenson, a Republican from Indianola, said while he may not agree with each decision, UNI’s administrators should be commended for making cuts.

“I wish other parts of the state government and other people in state government would be as pro-active,” Sorenson said.

Kibbie suggested continually cutting state support of the public universities is counter-productive.

“I hear all this anti-government, anti-government,” Kibbie said. “The definition of that is anti-public school.”

This debate happened this morning during a Government Oversight Committee meeting in the senate. The Iowa House, meanwhile, this afternoon is engaged in a similar debate about state support of the universities in Ames, Cedar Falls and Iowa City. House Republican propose reducing state support of Iowa, Iowa State and U-N-I next year by $31 million.