Vivid Headlines

What does 'nearly free' mandate mean for AZ universities' tuition?


What does 'nearly free' mandate mean for AZ universities' tuition?

Howard Fischer Capitol Media Services

How much can Arizona's state universities charge students?

There is a limit -- but only on paper.

The Arizona Constitution requires that instruction in the university system be "as nearly free as possible.''

In 2003, John Kromko, then a Democratic state representative from Tucson and a student at the University of Arizona, cited that clause after the Arizona Board of Regents hiked tuition by a whopping 39.1%. He sued along with another student, charging the board had run afoul of the constitutional mandate.

The justices of the Arizona Supreme Court, however, were not about to step in. Andrew Hurwitz, then a member of the court, said he and his colleagues were in no position to decide that question.

"At best we would be substituting our subjective judgment of what is reasonable under all circumstances for that of the Board (of Regents) and the Legislature, the very branches of government to which our constitution entrusts this decision,'' he wrote.

People are also reading... Rep. Ruben Gallego asks Arizona Court of Appeals to keep divorce papers sealed Marana police officer on leave after alleged pickup truck break-in Liquidation sale to be held as Tucson's Sam Levitz goes out of business Arizona Wildcats hold off No. 10 Utah, upset Utes in Salt Lake City to begin Big 12 play This 26-year-old Tucson pizzeria is moving -- 200 yards Judge bars Arizona official from enforcing disputed election rules 150 fun events happening in Tucson this October 2024 ๐ŸŽƒ๐ŸŠ Arizona Senate race: Gallego likely needs Trump backers to win Man shot, wounded during 'street takeover' in Tucson The ultimate guide to all 58 food vendors at this year's Tucson Meet Yourself 5 takeaways from the Arizona Wildcats' 23-10 upset of No. 10 Utah | Michael Lev Former pro player featured on 'Basketball Wives' pleads guilty to federal charge in St. Louis Tucson man accused of deliberate, fatal strike with pickup truck Support builds for Santa Cruz River refuge from Mexico to Marana Here's how much rain we got during monsoon this year โ˜”๏ธ

But depending on the Legislature to set limits could prove fruitless. In fact, it was the failure of the Legislature to increase state funding for the universities for the 2003-04 school year that resulted in the regents deciding they needed to impose the 39.1% tuition hike, a figure that translated to about $1,000 more for in-state residents.

Lawmakers have repeatedly refused to either cap tuition themselves -- something they last did in 1926 -- or force the regents to guarantee incoming students that their costs won't go up beyond a certain level over four years. The universities themselves, however, have instituted similar programs on their own.

The bottom line, said Hurwitz in 2003, is that the meaning of "as nearly free as possible'' is a "non-justiciable political question.'' That's because tuition is based on the budget adopted by the Board of Regents "after making a series of policy decisions about the quality of the state universities and the level of instruction to be offered.''

Once those decisions are made -- and once the Legislature decides how much of the cost it will fund -- that leaves most of the rest of the price tag to be borne by tuition.

"The cost of tuition could of course be reduced if the board and the Legislature made different policy decisions,'' Hurwitz wrote, such as reducing faculty salaries, increasing class sizes or cutting building maintenance.

Kromko wasn't the only one to make a run at using the Arizona Constitution to challenge tuition hikes. So did Mark Brnovich when he was Arizona attorney general.

But in a unanimous 2019 decision, the justices did not address the assertion by Brnovich that the sharp tuition increases of the past decade violated the constitutional provision. Nor did they address the attorney general's argument that the Board of Regents relied on extraneous and illegal outside factors, such as what state-run universities elsewhere were charging, to determine how much students here should pay.

Justice Clint Bolick, writing for the court, said all that is legally irrelevant as Brnovich had no legal right to bring the lawsuit in the first place.

He pointed out that state law allows the attorney general to bring legal actions only when specifically authorized by statute or with permission of the governor.

In this case, Bolick said, there was no legislative authority. And then-Gov. Doug Ducey, who was openly hostile to the legal challenge, never authorized it.

Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community.

Want to see more like this?

Get our local education coverage delivered directly to your inbox.

Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy.

Previous articleNext article

POPULAR CATEGORY

entertainment

12448

discovery

5617

multipurpose

13052

athletics

12935