
An increase in tuition is also racist.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A North Carolina lawmaker who proposed to slash tuition to just $500 a semester at five public universities that serve mostly blacks, American Indians and the poor announced Wednesday that he is scaling back on the bill after running into mistrust so fierce he was branded a racist.
Republican Sen. Tom Apodaca said he plans to drop the three historically black colleges from the bill. Apodaca is Hispanic.
The move came after North Carolina’s NAACP called the proposed tuition cut a back-door attempt to drive the black schools into bankruptcy.
For weeks, administrators, faculty members, students and others have warned that the loss in tuition revenue could cripple the five institutions. Many said they didn’t trust assurances from the conservative, GOP-controlled legislature that it would make up for the lost funding with up to $70 million a year.
Others warned that a rock-bottom tuition of $500 would look bad and cheapen a degree from the schools involved.
Apodaca, one of the powerful members of the Senate, said his goal was to make college more affordable and boost enrollment. He said he was surprised by the reaction to the bill.
“I’ve also been disappointed in being called a racist and bigot,” he said.
He said he is dropping Winston-Salem State, Elizabeth City State and Fayetteville State from the bill. It will now apply only to the University of North Carolina at Pembroke, a historically Native American university, and Western Carolina University, which serves the poverty-stricken Appalachian region.
Undergraduate tuition would be reduced in the fall of 2018 to $500 a semester for in-state students and $2,500 for out-of-state students. Tuition at the five schools now runs between $1,400 and $1,900 a semester for residents and between $6,500 and $7,500 for non-residents.
Though the legislation would have put a college education within reach of more people, it ran into unexpected resistance.
“It hadn’t been pleasant, and for the life of me I can’t understand it,” said Apodaca, who attended Western Carolina. “I would do nothing to cheapen the degree. And we’re just trying to lower tuition costs and help some institutions. But anyway, if they feel that way, that’s fine.”
