PHOENIX — Community colleges and universities around Arizona are preparing for an influx of veterans and their dependents taking advantage of the new GI Bill, which doubles education benefits and helps with living expenses.
Arizona State University expects about 140 additional students, a 16 percent increase from the number of veterans now attending the school, when the bill takes effect in August 2009, said Stuart Hadley, ASU’s assistant vice president of policy affairs.
“We’re really excited about the increase of veterans on campus,” Hadley said. ASU is basing its figures on national estimates of veterans and dependents who will use the benefits right away, Hadley said.
Locally, Cochise College serves many area military members by not only offering traditional classes, but by also holding classes on Fort Huachuca. The University of Phoenix and Wayland Baptist University also offer classes on post. Mission-oriented and online classes offered by these schools are also popular with soldiers. These educational institutions will likely see a boost from the new GI Bill.
|
|
Mesa Community College is expecting a 30 percent increase because veterans tend to start out at junior colleges, according to Valerie Vigil, the school’s assistant director of financial aid and director of veterans’ affairs.
Vigil said one reason for the anticipated demand is the bill’s expansion of benefits to National Guard members and reservists, many of whom have been called to serve in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“Active-duty have a good bill right now, but those coming back from Iraq will really benefit,” Vigil said.
The Post-9/11 Veterans Education Assistance Act of 2008, signed into law June 30, provides benefits to veterans and National Guard members and reservists called to active duty. Covering those who served from Sept. 11, 2001, on, it also applies to spouses and dependents.
The benefits, which can reach $80,000 and include living expenses, apply to universities, community colleges and trade schools. The maximum benefit is based on the highest in-state tuition at a public institution in the veteran’s home state.
In Arizona this means approximately $5,500 in tuition a year, according to Leland Sevy, administrator of the Arizona Department of Veterans’ Services’ Veterans Education & Training Approving Agency.
Last year, the University of Arizona launched a series of programs to help retain veteran students and attract new ones, anticipating more students who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, said Lynette Cook-Francis, assistant vice president for student affairs.
“We began to look more broadly to see how we were serving veterans on campus, and we decided we needed to get ourselves better prepared for what we knew would be bigger numbers,” she said.
Cook-Francis called that good timing now that the new GI Bill is in place.
Key facts about new GI Bill
Here are quick facts about the new GI Bill:
Name: Post-9/11 Veterans Education Assistance Act of 2008:
Signed Into Law: June 30
Applies To: Those who served on active duty from Sept. 11, 2001, on, including National Guard members and reservists.
Service Required: Full benefits for those who have served at least 36 months, reduced to 30 continuous days for those discharged due to a disability related to military service. Those with less service receive a percentage.
What’s Covered: Tuition and fees at institutions of higher education, which can include vocational schools and nontraditional programs. A stipend to help with living expenses applies to those studying more than half-time at brick-and-mortar institutions but not to those taking online courses.
Source: Department of Veterans Affairs

The Morning Blend
Welcome
Complete Media Kit





Indepentent wrote on Sep 9, 2008 10:29 PM: