EDITORIAL
The law providing free
tuition for students in state universities and colleges (SUCs) is expected to
be implemented in June next year as agencies may finish the implementing rules in
a few days, the top official of the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) said
Wednesday
The CHED,
Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) as well as the
budget and science departments have started crafting the implementing rules for
the free tuition.
The
implementing rules and regulations are targeted to be finished the soonest time
so it can be implemented by June 2018, according to CHED Commissioner Prospero
de Vera.
“Hopefully,
we can finish it within the week so that the commission can go over it, the
other agencies can go over it and sign it within 15 days,” De Vera told a
Malacanang press conference.
Duterte
signed into law the free college education bill on Aug. 3 despite opposition
from his economic managers, who said the government does not have funds to
implement it. De Vera said about P20 billion is needed to implement the
law next year.
“Based on
estimates, at least P16.8 billion is needed for the first year of
implementation of the law for the 112 SUCs and the 16 local government-created
universities (LUCs), which have been evaluated by CHED. The amount excludes
around P3 billion to P4 billion for technical and vocational education under
TESDA,” he said.
De Vera
said among the possible funding sources are scholarship and financial
assistance from the budget of several agencies and money allotted for
scholarship programs.
“Together
with the Senate and House of Representatives, we will look for other funding
sources from the 2018 National Expenditure Program,” he said.
De Vera
said the implementing rules would include provisions on tightening admission
and retention policies to prevent the massive transfer of students from private
to public institutions.
He said the
funding assistance would only be given to students who enrol in a full load and
finish their course on time.
“We will
also exclude students who are taking their second degree, for example, and make
sure that the enrolment in SUCs will be controlled,” De Vera said.
“We will
tell the SUCs and LUCs to make sure that they do not adapt an open admission,”
he added.
Asked to
react to calls to ensure that the free college tuition would only benefit poor
students, De Vera said the law does not impose an income requirement on
admission.
“The law
provides for all qualified students in good standing per admission and
retention policy. So it will cover every one. For those who are poorer, that is
where the additional subsidy comes in,” he said. De Vera said the government
has an existing program providing financial assistance to about 40,000
students.
“What the
law will do is expand that coverage to get more poor students because
additional funding will be made available,” he said. De Vera said of the
111 local government-created universities, only 16 have been certified by CHED
as eligible for subsidies. The action of President Duterte to give free
tuition particularly for marginalized students, as against the advice of his
economic managers is laudable.
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