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Maryland Higher Education Accomplishments
- Governor O’Malley has frozen tuition at all University
System of Maryland (USM) Schools and Morgan State University
for the fourth consecutive year. The tuition freeze has no
doubt helped 2008 total fall headcount enrollment at
Maryland’s colleges and universities grow to a record level
of 337,211 students, or 3.4 percent over the previous year –
an increase of 11,135 students. Because of the investment
Governor O’Malley made at USM schools (fall headcount
enrollment increased 4.2 percent) and Morgan State
University (an increase of 1.6 percent), a student
graduating this year will not have seen their tuition rise
from enrollment to their fourth year in school. Meanwhile,
enrollment at the State’s independent schools over which
Governor O’Malley has no jurisdiction in terms of setting
their tuition rates (their independent boards of directors
set tuition), was relatively flat decreasing by only 198
students (three-tenths of a decrease). This is what
President Obama had to say about the University System of
Maryland's institutions recently: "So I challenge state,
college and university leaders to put affordability front
and center as they chart a path forward. I challenge them to
follow the example of the University of Maryland, where
they're streamlining administrative costs, cutting energy
costs, using faculty more effectively, making it possible
for them to freeze tuition for students and for families."

- Governor O’Malley created the Higher Education
Investment Fund (HEIF) during the 2007 special session
through the Tax Reform Act of 2007 (Chapter 3). The major
purpose of the fund is to invest in public higher education
and workforce development. HEIF funds can only be used to
supplement general fund appropriations to public senior
higher education institutions (i.e. University System of
Maryland institutions and Morgan State University) for
related capital projects and workforce development
initiatives administered by MHEC. The Tax Reform Act of 2007
increased the corporate income tax rate from 7 to 8.25
percent which began in January 1, 2008 and distributes a
portion of the increased revenue to the HEIF. The HEIF
received $16.0 million in fiscal 2008 and $54.3 million in
fiscal 2009. This represents six percent of total corporate
income tax revenues in fiscal 2009. The General Assembly
reauthorized the HEIF for FY 2010 and the Governor has said
he will work to make the HEIF permanent.
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Higher Education experienced a State
operating funds increase of 8.3% from FY 2007 to FY 2008
from $1.43 billion to $1.549 billion. State funding for
higher education increased 6.2%, to $1.645 billion, from FY
2008 to FY 2009 and $1.66 billion (a 0.8 increase) from FY
2009 to FY 2010.
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Governor O’Malley authorized more than $220
million in State capital funds to community colleges in FY
2008 through 2010. Capital funding rose from $56.4 million
in FY 08 to a record $84.3 million in FY 2010. This is a 49
percent increase over FY 08. The Governor’s record
appropriation to community colleges stunned many higher
education officials because it was such a bold increase.
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Governor O’Malley has included more than
$333 million in his past three years’ budgets for grants and
scholarships which are administered by the Maryland Higher
Education Commission’s Office of Student Financial
Assistance. This vital aid went to more than 174,000
Maryland students attending Maryland two- and four-year
universities, colleges and private career schools during
this time.
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Thanks in large part to the O’Malley-Brown
administration’s commitment to higher education in Maryland,
four of Maryland’s public colleges and universities were
included in Kiplinger Magazine’s 100 top colleges for 2009.
The ranked schools included University of Maryland College
Park (9th), St. Mary’s College of Maryland (32nd), Salisbury
University (68th) and Towson University (90th). Four
Maryland public college or universities made Kiplinger’s 100
best values list: UMCP (9th), SMCM (32nd), Salisbury (68th),
and Towson (90th). Two Maryland schools made the Kiplinger’s
100 best values for independent colleges or universities:
Johns Hopkins University (18th) and Loyola College in
Maryland (47th). Eight Maryland public and independent
colleges and universities made the Princeton Review’s list
of the 368 Best Schools in the country. They include:
Goucher College, Johns Hopkins University, Loyola College,
St. John’s College, St. Mary’s College of Maryland,
Salisbury University, Towson University, University of
Maryland College Park, and University of Maryland Baltimore
County. Four Maryland schools made the 2009 Princeton
Review’s 100 Best Value Colleges in Maryland: St. Mary’s
College of Maryland, Salisbury University, Towson
University, and University of Maryland Baltimore County (the
Princeton report did not rate these schools in order).
Kiplinger’s link to top 100 colleges and universities in the
country:
http://www.kiplinger.com/tools/colleges/ataglance.html
Kiplinger’s link to methodology of rankings:
http://www.kiplinger.com/tools/colleges/methodology.html
Kiplinger’s link to top 100 college and university values:
http://www.kiplinger.com/tools/colleges/
Princeton review link to Best 368 Schools:
http://www.princetonreview.com/rankingsbest.aspx
Princeton review link to 2009 Best Value public and
independent schools:
http://www.princetonreview.com/best-value-colleges.aspx
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Governor O’Malley provided $750,000 funding
in FY 2009 and FY 2010 for the Veterans of the Afghanistan
Iraq Conflict (VAIC) scholarship administered by the
Maryland Higher Education Commission’s Office of Student
Financial Assistance. In FY 2008, MHEC spent $643,000 in
VAIC scholarship money that went to123 veterans. The average
award was $5,228. During the 2006 General Assembly Session,
then-Delegate Brown, led the fight for this funding. House
Bill 3 – the Advocacy and Education Act of 2006 – of which
he was a primary co-sponsor with House Speaker Michael E.
Busch, did the following: established the Veterans of the
Afghanistan and Iraq Conflicts Scholarship; altered
eligibility requirements for the Edward T. Conroy Memorial
Scholarship Program; established a specified death benefit
for Maryland residents serving in the Afghanistan and Iraq
conflicts; established the Outreach and Advocacy Program in
the Department of Veterans Affairs; requires the Program to
help veterans and their dependents access specified
benefits; and established the Task Force to Study State
Assistance to Veterans.
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