Colorado
Springs Gazette
September 5,
2000
A
recent Gazette editorial calls TABOR, the 1992 voter approved amendment to the
Colorado Constitution,
an opportunity rather than a hindrance to higher education. It
is true that substantially less than half of the operating revenue of our state
colleges and universities comes from state tax revenues, putting Colorado very
near the bottom of the nation in state funding per student.
However, it is incorrect to suggest that institutions of higher education
can rely increasingly on student paid tuition and fees to make up shortfalls in
funding. One
of the less understood provisions of TABOR is that student paid tuition and fees
are part of annual
state revenue.
TABOR goes beyond requiring voter approval for new taxes to restricting
the level of growth in state revenues from existing taxes, fees
AND tuition. The refunds from surplus revenues that we have been
receiving are paid, in part, by the tuition of students.
As
in the rest of the nation, we expect that an ever greater share of Colorado?s
population will aspire to higher education. But new tuition dollars from
more students will simply push state revenues farther above the TABOR calculated
formula for ?allowable
revenue?. New
tuition dollars can contribute to larger tax refunds or tax cuts but not to
providing more higher education services.
This puts at risk the ability to provide for additional students and to
operate competitively in the knowledge based ?new economy?. Daphne
Greenwood, Director and Professor of Economics Center
for Colorado Policy Studies CU-
Colorado Springs
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