Tuition regulation

>> Wednesday, May 8, 2013


EDITORIAL

Enrolment is about to start for the next school year and parents are hard up trying to make ends meet while paying for their children’s tuition. 

With over 400 colleges and universities submitting tuition hike proposals to the Commission on Higher Education for school year 2013-2014, many sectors are pushing a “strong tuition regulation law” that would give government agencies such as CHED “muscle and teeth” to control tuition and other fees in over 2,000 higher education institutions nationwide.

The government’s current tuition regulation policy – CHED Memorandum Order 3, according to KabataanPartylist Rep. Raymond Palatino, is a toothless paper tiger.

While the said policy lays down guidelines for proper consultations regarding fee increases, he said CHED has no proper mechanism to monitor compliance.In 2011, Palatino filed House Bill No. 4286 or the Tuition Regulation Bill which seeks to institutionalize a mechanism for the “strict regulation of the yearly increase of tuition and other fees.”

HB 4286 lays down strict guidelines on the imposition of tuition and other fees, including rules regarding tuition increases and strict penalty clauses for erring higher education institutions which include imprisonment and a fine that could go as much as five million pesos.

The proposed bill basically empowers CHED to regulate tuition and other fees while also strengthening and institutionalizing the role of students, teachers and parents in the consultation process, according to Palatino.

While the said bill has been backed by various student governments and organizations nationwide, it failed to get past the committee level during the 15th Congress. The youth solon said that KabataanPartylist intends to refile the said bill if granted another term in Congress.

CMO 3 is clearly not enough to stop the unabated tuition and other fee increases in the country. We need strong legislation to reform the deregulated and profit-oriented education system that we have today.

With elections just around the corner, it would do well for voters to choose well candidates who espouse a rational and comprehensive school reform system.

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