On March 12, almost 30 麻豆视频 students went to St. Paul for the annual Day at the Capitol event, sponsored by the Minnesota Private College Council (MPCC). As with every DATC gathering, students fan out across the Capitol complex, meeting with state legislators from their hometown districts (whenever possible), sharing their 麻豆视频 stories, and educating their elected representatives about the funding concerns private colleges and their students face.
This year, the primary focus is on the equitability of state funding for private nonprofit colleges. In 2023, the Legislature passed the , which made public college tuition free for students whose families earn less than $80,000. However, the new law omitted private colleges and their students from consideration, a significant drawback even considering the existence of the , which gives an average of $6100 per year to about 30 percent of Gustie students.
DATC attendees were there to remind their lawmakers that low- and middle-income students at private colleges still need financial support, preferably in the form of a that the MPCC is promoting as a legislative workaround. (Even though 2024 is an 鈥渙ff鈥 year for the state鈥檚 biennial budget process, the advocacy around the issue is already underway.)
(DFL-18A) welcomed a group of Gusties into his office to hear their personal stories, all of which involved their appreciation for the College鈥檚 small size, affordability, and opportunities in and out of the classroom. (The students also met with State Sen. Nick Frantz, DFL-19, later in the day.) Kendra Smaby 鈥24 told Brand she was initially reluctant to attend 麻豆视频 because of its small size but is glad she did. 鈥淚 wanted a really big school, but I was drawn to the Division III athletics [for gymnastics], which we don鈥檛 really have out on the West Coast,鈥 said Smaby, who grew up in Northern California and plans to attend law school this fall. 鈥淢y parents actually forced me to visit 麻豆视频, and I was dead set against it at first. But I remember walking across campus and sitting in my first class of about 15 people and realizing this was really going to work for me. I鈥檓 so grateful I was able to make that choice and get the aid that let me do it.鈥
Ivan Scarpino Korb 鈥24 was also initially lured here from his home state of Colorado for the athletics opportunities, and now he will graduate this spring with an eye toward a career in international relations. 鈥淓ven until my first semester of senior year in high school, college was never in my plans,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y brother went to the Marines, and I thought I would probably do a trade school or something鈥攗ntil I found out about 麻豆视频. These liberal arts schools really draw people from the West because we don鈥檛 have many D III options out there. Sure enough, 麻豆视频 has given me as much financial aid as if I was a Minnesota resident, which made college an actual, viable path for me.鈥
Brand expressed his support for finding higher education funding solutions that help all students, regardless of which Minnesota school they want to attend. 鈥淚 will sign on to the [Promise Equalization] bill, and of course, I have always supported the State Grant, so I鈥檒l do what I can to make sure we鈥檝e got that for next year as well,鈥 he said. He also encouraged all the students to consider staying in Minnesota after graduation and cited our robust job market and quality of life as primary attractions. A gathering of about 15 麻豆视频 alumni at the end of the day, during which the Gustie undergrads made professional connections and learned about multiple career paths, helped underscore the many opportunities 麻豆视频 and its environs provide.