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Trustees back fee boosts, including 9% for housing; maximum of 2.8% for tuition
The UNC Asheville Board of Trustees last Saturday unanimously approved a proposal to require full-time UNCA students to carry health insurance, beginning with the fall semester in 2008.
Under the plan, students must either provide evidence of health coverage or pay $611 per year for a plan through a company chosen by the university. One board member recused himself from the health-insurance vote. The proposal follows the trend of other state schools.
In other action, the board also unanimously approved recommended
tuition and fee increases ó including a boost of about 9 percent for
housing ó for the 2008-2009 academic year. One board member recused
herself on the tuition-fees vote. The meeting following UNCAís Winter
Commencement.
The recommendations, which now move to the UNC Board of Governors for
consideration in early 2008, originated with a six-member tuition
committee and an eight-member fees committee, comprising faculty,
students and administrators.
The money from the higher rates will be partially allocated for new and
expanded student-activities programs, such as group fitness classes and
increased outdoors activities, UNCA officials noted.
The trustees backed increasing UNCAís annual in-state tuition by $32
and annual out-of-state tuition by $372 for the 2008-09 academic year.
Current annual in-state tuition is $2,307 and annual out-of-state
tuition is $13,297.
If the tuition increase is approved, 25 percent will be set aside for
students receiving need-based financial aid, 50 percent will go to
student services, and 25 percent to faculty salaries.
The recommendation approved by the trustees also includes a $98.50
increase in annual required student fees. The fees help fund student
activities, student health services, athletics, and student computing
and scientific equipment needs. The required student fees for the
current academic year total $1,736.85.
Under the plan, out-of-state undergraduates will pay $13,669 ó a 2.8 percent boost over the current annual cost of $13,297.
As for the housing-fee increase, housing costs for a standard two-person room will increase from $3,450 to $3,760.
Ten campuses in the 16-campus University of North Carolina system
currently require students to carry health insurance and two other
campuses have similar plans under way for fall 2008, according to Bill
Haggard, UNCAís vice chancellor for student affairs.
ìIn recent years, we have become deeply concerned about our uninsured
students,î Haggard said. ìWe know that students who are ill will seek
medical care earlier when they are covered by insurance, which, in
turn, can prevent treatable problems from growing into serious
illnesses and medical crises.
ìWe have seen studentsí academic careers threatened when they become
seriously ill or injured, and when uninsured students become ill or
injured, that threat can be significantly compounded by substantial
health-care debt. It makes sense for the university to establish
student health-insurance coverage that provides access to quality
health care and achieves a balance between coverage and cost,î Haggard
noted.
Full-time undergraduate students, which are those students carrying 12
or more credit hours, who can document that they have a minimum level
of health-insurance coverage will receive a waiver.
Students who do not have adequate documentation will be required to
purchase insurance through UNCA at the estimated cost of $611 a year
($305.50 per semester) for 12-month coverage. Those who purchase the
insurance through the university will be able to have the insurance
premiums built into the cost of attendance for financial-aid purposes.
The insurance will be provided through Pearce & Pearce Inc., a
national student health-insurance company, which already offers
optional health insurance for UNCA students.
About 30 percent of UNCA full-time undergraduate students are
uninsured, based on the experiences of the 10 UNC campuses that already
require health insurance. UNCA expects to have about 3,000 full-time
undergraduate students on campus in fall 2008.†
The plan will cover up to $3,000 of health-care costs for each
incident, which includes emergency-room visits and routine doctor
visits, with a cap on insurance payments at $30,000 per year.
Trustees chairwoman Janice Brumit termed the plan ìa pretty good deal.î
Board member Joseph Damore, president and chief exuctive officer of
Mission Hospitals, explained that he did not participate in the vote on
the health-insurance proposal because he wanted to avoid the appearance
of a conflict of interest owing to his health-care profession.
In addition, board member Audrey Byrd Mosley said she recused herself
from the vote on the tuition and fee increase because her child attends
UNCA.
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