Good morning MACRAO membership-
Below are legislative updates since our last post. This post includes progress on Missouri legislation and some national articles that we thought may be of interest to the membership:
Good morning MACRAO membership-
Below are legislative updates since our last post. This post includes progress on Missouri legislation and some national articles that we thought may be of interest to the membership:
AACRAO has submitted comments to the U.S. Department of Education related to transcript withholding regulations via public letter. The MACRAO Governmental Relations Committee thought this may be of interest to the membership. A link to this letter can be found at the link below:
Good morning MACRAO membership-
Below are legislative updates since our last post on February 2. This post includes progress on Missouri legislation and some national articles that we thought may be of interest to the membership.
Hello MACRAO membership-
Below are legislative updates since our last post on January 12. Legislative movement has been limited thus far in early sessions as filibusters have limited legislative progress. Below are updates on additional bills that have been filed since the previous Governmental Relations Committee blog post along with some articles that we thought would be of interest to the membership.
The Missouri Legislature reopened on Wednesday, January 3. The MACRAO Governmental Relations Committee wanted to share with you a summary of some of the House and Sentate bills that were prefiled that may be of interest to the MACRAO membership, which are listed below. Additionally, there are a couple of AACRAO Transcript article links included that covers items that appear to be potential Department of Education areas of interest for the upcoming year.
House Bills
HB 1432 (https://house.mo.gov/Bill.aspx?bill=HB1432&year=2024&code=R)
Sponsor: Willard Haley (R)
Synopsis: This bill creates an alternative teaching certification process. Beginning in the 2024-25 school year the state board may authorize teaching certification to anyone with a bachelor’s degree or higher. This teaching certification will be limited to the holder’s major area of study.
Status: Prefiled
Good morning MACRAO-
The MACRAO Governmental Relations Committee wanted to check in with you as we approach the upcoming Missouri 103rd General Assembly session beginning in January 2024. First, we would like to introduce the MACRAO Governmental Relations team for the upcoming year. This group will track the bills and issues that may be of interest to the MACRAO membership. We will send out emails periodically throughout the legislative session to keep you informed about what is being discussed. If you see additional articles or information that you think would be of interest to MACRAO, we welcome you to share them with a member of this group.
On Tuesday, October 24, the US Education Department released a fact sheet titled Protecting Students Through Final Regulations That Strengthen Department of Education Oversight and Monitoring of Colleges and Universities. Several rules are included, but of particular interest to MACRAO membership is that colleges and universities will be restricted from withholding course credits paid for with Federal money from students' transcripts.
This Inside Higher Ed article talks about some of the interpretation challenges that colleges and universities will need to navigate, particularly as it relates to the concept of institutions figuring out whether to and how to attempt to withhold "parts of a transcript" when other parts are restricted from being withheld, or to eliminate withholding transcripts completely.
In our earlier legislative updates this academic year, we mentioned that the Supreme Court would be hearing two cases (Harvard, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill) related to affirmative action and admissions. The decisions in these cases were released yesterday morning, so the MACRAO Governmental Relations Committee wanted to provide you an update. The admissions systems used by these two institutions were determined to be unconstitutional. We have included links to Inside Higher Ed and AACRAO articles related to the decision as well as a link to the Supreme Court decision below.
The Missouri 2023 Legislative Session came to a conclusion on Friday, May 12. Below is a summary of the legislation that would most likely be of MACRAO interest that did (or did not) pass. The majority of the bills highlighted in our updates throughout the last few months ultimately did not pass. Of course, all passed legislation must still be signed or could be potentially vetoed by the Governor’s office, requiring further legislative consideration in a future veto session scheduled for this fall.
Budget Highlights
Good morning MACRAO membership-
The MACRAO Governmental Relations Committee wanted to provide the membership an update on where House and Senate bills currently stand as well as some AACRAO-related updates.
The two topics to bring to your are attention this week are:
HB 2387 was discussed this week. It would establish the 21st Century Missouri Education Task Force. The task force would include members of the general assembly, other stakeholders including members of the business community, the Commissioner of Education, and the Commissioner of Higher Education. The task force’s mission would include evaluating current educational processes and funding. It would make recommendations for legislation and submit a report summarizing its activities to the General Assembly before Aug. 28, 2021. The Missouri Chamber of Commerce and Industry spoke in favor of the legislation.
Just a couple quick updates for you.
Last week SB 642 had a hearing. The legislation seeks to codify into statute budgetary instructions included in HB 3 since 2015 that prevent public institutions from offering in-state tuition to students with unlawful immigration status. Proponents testified that the legislation would reinforce current federal law and end subsidized tuition during a time of scarce resources. Opponents testified that the bill would encourage affected students to seek postsecondary and future workforce opportunities outside the state.
FYI the Governor signed SB304, last week, the bill that clarifies combat veteran definition and limits graduate tuition to 30% of cost of tuition and fees. This bill also gives us the ability to tell the veteran that they could waive the tuition reduction if they have federal aid that would cover the cost so it is not a financial burden to the institution. We will have to see how the Department of Higher Education decides to write rules on this portion of the law.
Here is a link: https://www.senate.mo.gov/19info/BTS_Web/Bill.aspx?SessionType=R&BillID=2339132
Below are the highlights. The session ended. Now it’s tracking what gets signed!
*Taken from AACRAO reports
Below are the highlights. There are other “educational” bills, but I’ve tried to focus on issues that directly impact our work as registrars, admissions officers or enrollment managers. There’s a lot to watch, so if you hear of something I missed, let me know!! I’ll try to track it down.
There are the new Knowledge Area requirements since last spring. These are outlined on the Knowledge Areas in the Course Transfer Tracker system.
Here’s my highlights. There are other “educational” bills, but I’ve tried to focus on issues that directly impact our work as registrars, admissions officers or enrollment managers.
NO update on the following
• Budget Time – The budget process, which will impact all state institutions as well as state scholarship and financial aid for all Missouri students. MDHE is set to present the higher education budget this coming Tuesday, Feb. 12.
• Fast Track Workforce Incentive Grant - The House Workforce Development Committee, amended on Feb. 4. The house committee substitute clarified the eligibility criteria for receiving the grant by limiting it to those who have not already received a bachelor’s degree and to those who are at least twenty-five years of age and have not been enrolled in an educational program for the prior two academic years.
• STEM Certificates for high school students - HB 456 | This bill would allow high schools that want to do so to develop a STEM certification for their students. This would not directly impact all of higher ed.
• Returning Heroes – There is an effort to modify the act to include benefits for graduate students (masters and doctorate) seeking degrees. The maximum that the students can be assessed is 30% of tuition and fees. Students must have been in active duty combat and must claim the benefit within 20 years of being discharged. The veteran must have been a Missouri resident when first entering the military or entered military service in Missouri. This is HB 400.
Gov. Parson signed Executive Order 19-03 on Jan. 17, which moves the Division of Workforce Development and the Missouri Economic Research and Information Center from the Department of Economic Development to the Department of Higher Education. This transformational change will align Missouri’s workforce with higher education, giving Missourians one resource for a full range of post-secondary options – from apprenticeships to certificates to doctoral programs.
The Executive Order will be deemed accepted unless the House or Senate rejects it within 60 days via a simple majority vote by either chamber. If the Executive Order is not rejected, it will take legal effect on Aug. 28, 2019. Since we will receive the Division of Workforce Development’s budget beginning July 1, 2019, we will share some functions through an MOU.
Gov. Parson delivered the State of the State address on Jan. 16. His address focused on two major themes – workforce development and infrastructure. The Governor highlighted his commitment to higher education through the funding of Fast Track and MoExcels, at $22.2 million and $16.3 million respectively. Fast Track is a new financial aid program that addresses workforce needs by encouraging adults to pursue an industry-recognized credential in an area designated as “high need.” MoExcels funding will facilitate development and expansion of employer-driven education and training programs and initiatives to substantially increase educational attainment.
Gov. Parson also released his Missouri budget priorities for Fiscal Year 2020. Overall, the Governor recommended a total of $1.3 billion for higher education, which includes his proposal to move the Division of Workforce Development under the department.
Highlights for Higher Education: