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Arizona State University President Michael M. Crow said Arizona is the worst per-capita in terms of investing in higher education. He made these remarks as he lobbied for more state dollars in front of a state Senate Appropriations Committee Jan. 26. We need to think seriously what it is about us that has put us in a position where we are now investing, not just a little bit less than other places, (but) markedly less on a per-capita basis than every single state in this country in higher education, said Crow. The Legislature is currently finalizing a budget for fiscal year 2017, which runs from July 1, 2016, through June 30, 2017. Crow’s statement intrigued us, especially as he laid out the university’s strategic plan in front of the Arizona Board of Regents Thursday, so we put it to a fact-check. Makes the grade The basis of Crow’s remarks is a Jan. 25 survey done by the Center for the Study of Education Policy at Illinois State University and the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association, a Colorado-based group of education executives. In the study, which ranks all 50 states, Arizona is ranked 49th per capita in state higher education funding for fiscal year 2016, second to New Hampshire. Arizona spent $136.72 per resident on higher education in fiscal year 2015 and is expected to spend $115.83 per resident in the current fiscal year. New Hampshire spent $92.74 in fiscal year 2015 and is expected to spend $92.50 in the current fiscal year. Wyoming gives the most state funding to higher education. They spent $645.19 per resident in fiscal year 2015 and will spend $715.14 in the current fiscal year. The survey leaves out fiscal year 2016 data for Illinois and Pennsylvania, noting that these states haven’t finalized their budgets. In our map , we used fiscal year 2015 data for these states, with Pennsylvania and Illinois ranking as 48th and 7th, respectively. Crow said he used conservative states with conservative legislatures and conservative executives as his basis for comparison. ASU spokesman Mark Johnson told us the same thing, noting that the comparison group was not every state. Nonetheless, Arizona is not the worst when it comes to higher education funding per-capita -- New Hampshire is. Whether or not New Hampshire can be considered a conservative state is debatable given its Republican-led Legislature and Democratic governor. However, Arizona is at the bottom of several other higher education funding categories. The survey shows that Arizona has the biggest year to year drop in state higher education funding at 14 percent. In March, the Grand Canyon State also cut $99 million in funding to universities , which pales in comparison to the $8 million in new funding Gov. Doug Ducey has pitched for the state’s fiscal year 2017 budget. Our data is pretty straightforward, Grapevine editor Jim Palmer said, noting that the survey uses data from the U.S. Census Bureau and U.S. Department of Commerce. Arizona did experience the biggest decrease in funding from ‘15 to ‘16. Arizona also had the steepest decline, 47 percent , in state higher education spending per student from 2008 to 2015. But the state isn’t alone, either. A December 2014 Government Accountability Office report found that state funding for all public colleges decreased between fiscal years 2003 and 2012. Eileen Klein is president of the Arizona Board of Regents. She said the additional $8 million in state higher education funding is an encouraging first start. However, the objective isn’t to catapult through the rankings. The point is to make sure that we have sufficient dollars to support Arizona students, Klein said. Today, our universities operate at a loss for every Arizona resident student because the state is only committing, at this point, 34 percent towards the cost of educating our Arizona students. Our ruling Crow said, We are now investing, not just a little bit less than other places, (but) markedly less on a per-capita basis than every single state in this country in higher education. Arizona is not the worst, they’re 49th, for the current fiscal year in funding higher education. Crow said he made his comparison among conservative states, but New Hampshire, the worst for higher education funding based on the study he cited, appears to be in the middle of the political spectrum. Nevertheless, Arizona has endured the sharpest decline in state higher education funding from fiscal year 2015 to fiscal year 2016. Even on a per student basis, their spending dropped 47 percent, more than any other state, from 2008 to 2015. Given the context, we rate Crow’s claim as Mostly True.
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