Title: Trinity Tuition and Fees and Trinity Budget Explained
1Trinity Tuition and Feesand Trinity Budget
Explained
For more information contact President Patricia
McGuire president_at_trinitydc.edu www.trinitydc.edu
2March, 2009 Dear Trinity Students, Every
February, the Trinity Board of Trustees
establishes the tuition and fee levels for the
next academic year. On February 13, 2009, the
Trustees established the tuition levels for
2009-2010. You will find a statement of these
new tuition levels on the following slides.
Along with these new tuition levels, you will
find additional information to help you to
understand how Trinitys budget works, what your
tuition dollar supports, and how to get financial
aid. Mindful of the impact of the current
recession on Trinity students and families, the
Trustees wanted to keep next years tuition and
fee increases modest. At the same time, the
recession is posing challenges for Trinitys
finances, including some reduction in charitable
gifts and endowment income, and higher prices for
goods and services including utilities, insurance
and banking fees. After much consideration, the
Trustees decided upon a 3 increase for 2009-2010
tuition and fees, which is consistent with
Trinitys practice for many years. With this
increase, Trinitys full-time undergraduate
tuition next year will be 19,360, compared to
nearly 25,000 average tuition for private
colleges nationally. In the next few slides, you
will see how Trinitys tuition and fees stack up
against other universities in this area. We also
present important financial aid information as
well as budget information of interest to
you. We are doing everything possible to control
costs at Trinity, and to refrain from passing on
all but the most essential expense increases to
you, our students and families. I am happy to
provide any additional information you may
request to help you to plan your Trinity
education effectively. Thank you for being a
vital part of the Trinity community! Sincerely
, President Patricia McGuire
3The next slide shows Trinitys new tuition levels
for 2009-2010
4Tuition rates change annually. Additional fees
apply for certain courses and services. Check
Trinitys website www.trinitydc.edu for the most
current list of tuition rates and fees each
semester.
5The next slide shows how the growth in
Trinitys full-time undergraduate tuition (the
yellow bars) compares to the growth in private
college tuitions nationally (the purple
bars)since 1991!
6TUITION 1991-2010Comparing Trinity FULL-TIME
Tuition with National Average for 4 Yr Private
College
7 .3.7..0 ..3.6..2.6
5..4.4.6.3...3.35...........5
.........3...........3............3............
3........3..........3 TRINITY PERCENTAGE
INCREASEs
7The next slide shows how the growth in
Trinitys full-time undergraduate tuition (the
yellow columns) in the last three years compares
to area universities and other womens colleges
8Tuition Levels with Cohort Comparisons FY07-08-09
9The next slide shows comparisons of
per-credit-hour tuitions for undergraduate, adult
studies and graduate tuitions at area universities
10PER CREDIT Tuition Levels 08-09 Including
UMD/UMUC for NON Residents
11FINANCIAL AID AT TRINITY
12The next slide shows the volume of financial aid
from all sources awarded to Trinity students
note that all student aid is in this picture,
including loans to graduate students (the largest
group of borrowers) and scholarships to full-time
undergraduates
13(No Transcript)
14The next slide shows the same data as the
previous slide --- all aid from all sources, but
more clearly stratified on the left hand side of
the page, and on the right-hand side is a tall
column showing the tuition volume. Note that all
aid is higher than the tuition volume because
some portion of federal loans may be used for
living expenses.
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16Heres how the aid breaks down by types of aid
and academic level of students
17This slide shows grants only --- and grants from
Trinity to students total 4.7 million, which is
MORE THAN ALL OTHER GRANT SOURCES COMBINED (3.5
MILLION)
18How can I get more financial aid?
Trinitys Office of Enrollment Services (Main
154) will work with every student individually to
develop the best possible financial aid
package. Trinitys website includes extensive
financial aid information. Please visit
http//www.trinitydc.edu/offices/enrollment/Applyi
ng_for_Financial_Aid.html Trinitys Enrollment
Services staff will provide instructions for you
to apply for Federal Pell Grants and Loans. Our
staff will also tell you more about Trinity
grants and scholarships, as well as outside
scholarships. Please take advantage of the
expertise of our staff. They can help you! You
can also contact our staff for financial aid help
by writing to EnrollmentServices_at_trinitydc.edu Pho
ne 202-884-9530
19I Hear that the Federal Government is Increasing
Financial Aid. How Will the New Federal
Stimulus Package Help Me?
- Correct!
-
- The action that Congress and the President
recently took to pump billions of dollars into
the economy includes significant aid boosts for
students. These increases include - Pell Grant increases to 5300 and 5500 for the
next two years - A tuition tax credit of 2500 that includes an
opportunity to get a partial refund on tuition
even if you do not have to pay tax - Increases in work-study money as well
- Trinity will provide more information on the
actual benefits of these increases to Trinity
students when the U.S. Department of Education
provides more information on how this will
actually work in practice.
20I heard something about the process changing for
federal loans. Whats up with that?
- As you have heard in the media, the economic
crisis has had some effect on the student loan
industry, and a number of lenders have stopped
offering Federal Stafford Loans. - To make sure Trinity students continue to have
access to low-interest government-guaranteed
loans, Trinity began participating in the Direct
Loan Program last fall and will offer Direct
Loans, rather than the bank-based Stafford Loans,
to all students effective for the fall 2009
semester. - Direct Loans have the same loan amounts and
beneficial repayment terms for students as the
Stafford Loans, except that the lender is the
U.S. Department of Education, rather than a bank
or other financial institution. Students borrow
these loans directly from the federal government
and have a single contact the Direct Loan
Servicing Center through repayment. - Students who have borrowed from both the Stafford
Loan and Direct Loan Programs will have an
opportunity to consolidate all of their loans
through the Direct Loan Program at graduation. - If you borrowed a Stafford Loan this year, the
Office of Enrollment Services will be sending you
more information about Direct Loans in the coming
weeks. - Trinitys website includes extensive financial
aid information. Please visit
http//www.trinitydc.edu/offices/enrollment/Applyi
ng_for_Financial_Aid.html
21What Do We Do With Your Money?
22The following slide shows revenues and expenses
for Trinitys 27 million operating budget in
2008 - 2009 (Fiscal Year 2009)
23GROSS REVENUE/EXPENSE ACTUALS FISCAL
2006,2007,2008
27.1
27.1
26.3
26.1
26.1
25.8
EXPENSES
REVENUES
24FISCAL 2009 TRINITY BUDGET REVENUE SOURCES
25(No Transcript)
26What Tuition Contributes to the University Budget
- Overall, net student tuition (gross tuition minus
the 4.5 million in discount) contributes about
76 cents toward every dollar of the 22.5 million
expense budget that Trinity spends on direct
operating expenses, with the revenue streams from
each student population as follows - College of Arts Sciences tuition contributes
about 27 cents to every dollar spent - School of Education tuition contributes about 21
cents to every dollar spent - School of Professional Studies tuition
contributes about 28 cents to every dollar spent.
27If Tuition Revenues Pay Only 76 of Expenses,
Where Does the Rest of the Money Come From?
- The remaining 24 cents of every dollar that
Trinity spends comes from - Charitable gifts from alumnae and benefactors
(The Trinity Annual Fund) - Government grants and private contracts, and
- Revenues derived from auxiliary enterprises
including student room rentals, conference
income, Trinity Center rentals and fees, and
other similar sorts of miscellaneous income.
28What Are Trinitys Expenses?
On the expense side of the ledger, for every
dollar Trinity spends heres how the money is
allocated
57 cents Salaries and Benefits for Trinitys
Faculty and Staff
15 cents Facilities including utilities
5 cents SECURITY
3 cents Technology
3 cents Insurance, Legal, Audit
3 cents Printing and Postage
3 cents Food Service
2 cents Bad Debt
2 cents Advertising
1 cent Campus Shuttle
1 cents Library
5 cents Everything Else
29THE BOTTOM LINE
- We know that our students and families experience
a great deal of financial stress in pursuing
their dream of a Trinity education. In the
current recession, we are doing everything
possible to sustain Trinitys quality while
restraining prices. We provide extensive
financial aid for our students to help them
achieve their educational goals. - As a private university, Trinity does not receive
the taxpayer-subsidized support of the public
universities in this region, like the University
of Maryland or George Mason. Our main source of
operating funds comes from tuition, gifts and
grants, and payments for auxiliary services like
conferences. - Trinity makes every effort to control costs while
providing a high quality learning experience for
every student. Our devoted staff and faculty
work long hours with modest amenities to make
this education effective each day. -
- Continued
30THE BOTTOM LINE
- Trinitys top priorities in every budget cycle
are those budget items that contribute to
excellence in education here - improving faculty salaries
- continuous upgrades of Trinitys technological
capacity, especially academic technology and the
telecommunications infrastructure - improvement in Trinitys student services like
academic support and advising and - continuing to fund a large amount of student
financial aid through Trinitys own resources. - We also must attend continuously to facilities
needs and the growing costs of additional
regulatory compliance imposed by federal and
local governments. - Trinity has ambitious plans to renovate and
expand our academic and student life facilities
in the years to come. The funding for these
projects will come largely from gifts and grants
and auxiliary revenues, as is true right now for
the Trinity Center for Women and Girls in Sports.
- Note Funding for the Trinity Centers
operations and debt service comes from charitable
gifts and grants as well as auxiliary revenues
collected from membership fees and rentals.
Since the Trinity Center opened in 2003, all
students have had full access to the sports,
health, wellness and fitness facilities and
programs of the Trinity Center with no additional
fees charged to students for access to these
facilities and programs, unlike many other
universities that charge a special fee for use of
the recreation center.
31FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
- About College Tuition
- at Trinity at other universities
32College Tuition FAQs
- Why Does Tuition Go Up Every Year?
- Labor. Technology. Utilities. Facilities.
- Many reasons drive annual tuition increases.
The most notable reason stems from the fact that
colleges and universities are largely
labor-driven businesses, meaning that salaries
and benefits are our primary expense. - At Trinity, salaries and benefits account for
57 of our expense budget, which is pretty
normal. Our faculty and staff expect to get
raises every year, just like other workers.
These raises help our employees to keep up with
the cost of living. At Trinity, where salaries
and benefits are relatively modest, annual raises
have held steady at around 3 for many years. - We also often have to add faculty and staff to
keep up with the instructional and service needs
of our students. Or, we might want to add a new
program, like Nursing, that meets a distinctive
workforce need in our region. Personnel
additions are an investment cost that we hope
will pay for themselves over time, but in the
first few years, they are often additions to
budget without offsetting revenues. - Trinity must also purchase goods and services in
order to deliver our academic programs ---
everything from the cost of insurance to
telephone and internet providers to food service
to electricity, water and natural gas. These
expenses are rising all the time, and so
Trinitys tuition increases keep up with the
rising costs of goods and services we must
purchase.
33College Tuition FAQs
- OK, I get it about some annual increases, but why
does tuition go up faster than the rate of
inflation? - Some of the goods and services that Trinity must
buy have price rises that are much higher than
inflation --- for example, the cost of employee
health care goes up every year. The cost of water
and electricity in the Washington region is
skyrocketing. - Every time the federal or local government passes
a new regulation affecting higher education, we
have additional legal fees and other fees and
costs to ensure compliance. The new Higher
Education Act has 110 NEW federal regulations
that we have to abide by. - We also want to make ongoing investments in
technology, and the cost of technological
equipment and services is very high, and we have
to invest more than just a steady state
increase each year in order to provide state of
the art equipment and software. - Its also no secret that we have some fairly old
buildings on Trinitys campus, and we are
constantly trying to upgrade our older
infrastructure. Upgrading or replacing the old
infrastructure costs a lot more than simply the
price of a spigot at Home Depot --- in many cases
here at Trinity, we have to special order parts
because our mechanical equipment is so very
special. - Every time theres a bad incident on a college
campus elsewhere --- a violent crime, a weather
catastrophe --- we have to do a risk management
review here to see how prepared we are to cope
with a crisis. Often, in planning a better
response, we have to spend additional money on
personnel, consultation, equipment or other
services in order to improve our ability to
respond to a crisis.
34College Tuition FAQs
- Those seem like all administrative issues, but I
came here to get a great education. How do the
faculty and academic programs benefit from
tuition increases? - Beyond increases in salaries and benefits
mentioned above, Trinity also continuously
assesses whether to add full-time faculty or
staff positions to serve the academic and
co-curricular needs of students. For example,
with the growth in demand for Nursing, Trinity
will be adding more faculty in that discipline,
along with disciplines like Criminal Justice,
Business, Psychology and in related programs, all
of which enroll large numbers of majors or
support large general education courses. - Trinity will continue to add staff in related
Academic Services like advising and academic
support, as well as in Enrollment Services where
so many students go to get assistance with
registration, financial aid, and preparation for
graduation. - Improving academic technology is a continuous
focus at Trinity. All computers and peripherals
in classrooms, labs, faculty offices and
elsewhere are on a continuous upgrade plan, and
often the equipment needs replacement at an
earlier moment. Software upgrades must occur
frequently, and sometimes we need to retain
consultants to assist with academic technology
needs.
35College Tuition FAQs
- I live in Cuvilly and this building is just OLD.
When is Trinity going to get some modern
residence halls? - Cuvilly Hall is just 50 years old, which is not
OLD like Main Hall (110), but it does have that
certain 50s vintage. Many collegiate
residence halls date to the 1950s, 60s and 70s
when lots of colleges built dormitories quite
similar to Cuvilly, and many of these kinds of
buildings are still operational on campuses
across the country. Trinity has invested and
continues to invest in the residence hall
infrastructures in Main Hall, Cuvilly and Kerby,
including relatively new boilers and chillers and
other mechanical upgrades and improvements to
areas you may not see, like the roofs and
plumbing. - In 2009 Trinity added cable television because
the national digital conversion made it necessary
for Trinity to upgrade campus television access.
This is a great new benefit for residents, but
the project cost 200,000 for the initial
installation and will require ongoing fees. This
is just one example of the benefits and costs of
technological progress. - Trinity is planning to build new residence halls
in the future, but we do not have a firm date.
New residence halls today cost about 65,000 per
bed to construct, so a new residence hall for 200
students might cost as much as 13 million.
Were assessing how we might finance such a
project. This project is part of a continuing
campus expansion program that will also include a
new Academic Center and other facilities
improvements, including upgrades to Main Hall.
Trinity is preparing to launch a very significant
capital campaign to pay for all of these new
expenses. Tuition revenues cannot possibly
subsidize new buildings or major renovations.
36Trinity Welcomes Your Input!To Comment on this
Slideshowor to Receive Additional
InformationPlease ContactPresident Patricia
McGuirepresident_at_trinitydc.edu202-884-9050Offi
ce of the President125 Michigan Avenue,
NEWashington, DC 20017