BLINN OFFICIALS TO MEET WITH REP. RANEY

  

Three representatives from Blinn College will meet with Rep. John Raney regarding House Bill 1903.

Carolyn Miller small
Carolyn Miller

Trustee Carolyn D. Miller, CPA; Dr. Ana M. “Cha” Guzmán, interim district president; and Sylvia McMullen, president of Brazos County campuses, will request a meeting with Raney to establish a timeline for Blinn to develop a detailed financial action plan.

House Bill 1903 would require Blinn to allocate funds from tuition and fees and state appropriations based upon campus contact hours, effective in September.

Miller has served on the Blinn board since 2011. She has worked with big-four accounting firm KPMG for more than 25 years and the city of Brenham for almost 10 years, including the past six as CFO.

Ana Guzman small
Ana Guzman

Guzmán began serving as Blinn’s interim district president in January after serving 15 years as president of Palo Alto and Santa Fe community colleges. A member of the San Antonio Women’s Hall of Fame, Guzmán served as chair of the White House Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanic Americans from 1993-2000 and served on the Board of Trustees for the College Board.

Sylvia McMullen small
Sylvia McMullen

McMullen has served as president of Brazos County campuses since 2013 and has more than 30 years’ experience in educational leadership. Prior to coming to Blinn, she served on numerous state organizations, including the Texas Education Reform Foundation, the Texas Business Education Coalition and the Closing the Gap Initiative with the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.

During Wednesday’s special Board of Trustees meeting, the board modified its tuition rates for the 2015-16 academic year. Under the new structure, Blinn will offer four distinct rates based upon the student’s permanent residence:

  • An in-district rate of $48 per credit hour for students from Washington County.
  • A service area rate of $102 for students residing in the remainder of Blinn’s service area.
  • An out-of-service area rate of $117 for Texas students residing outside Blinn’s service area.
  • An out-of-state/international student rate of $200.

“With these rates, our tuition remains competitive with community colleges throughout the state while keeping our rates low for students throughout the Brazos Valley and fueling our continued growth,” Guzman said.

The additional $7.8 million in tuition revenue will be used to fund future enrollment growth. Blinn has experienced an historic 37.5 percent enrollment increase since 2006, with much of that growth taking place on the Bryan campus. Blinn registered 19,317 students for the recent Fall semester, an increase of 4.9 percent over last year and the highest total in the College’s 131-year history.

To accommodate that growth, Blinn is in the midst of a $10 million renovation project on its Bryan campus and recently announced the $3.8 million purchase of 95 acres at F.M. 2818 and Leonard Road in Bryan. The new campus will be developed into a 10,000–15,000 student campus and will allow Blinn to develop additional science, technology, engineering and mathematics offerings and expand its workforce, technical, research and health-related education programs.

Blinn anticipates breaking ground on the property this year with the goal of hosting classes as early as 2017.

Blinn is unique among community colleges in attracting students from across the state and nation. Blinn students came from 1,533 zip codes in Fall 2013, drawn by Blinn’s academic transfer rate – more than 20 percent higher than the state average – and the College’s unique partnerships with Texas A&M University, which include the Texas A&M Blinn TEAM (Transfer Enrollment at A&M) Program and the Texas A&M Engineering Academy at Blinn.  Story courtesy of Blinn College.

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4 Comments

  1. As soon as Brazos County starts coughing up property taxes at the same rate as I do to support Blinn College, then I’m happy to share the funding accordingly. Who the heck do they think paid to start their campus? Are they going to pay that back to Washington County?! This is the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard of, and legislators need to keep their nose out of where it doesn’t belong.

  2. I sure hope they explain to him his county isn’t paying taxes to the district and to shove it until he gets his constituents to pay up. Until then he needs to shut up.

  3. Once upon a time, there were two women and two men who lived in twin cities. One couldn’t pass the bar, one couldn’t be a Dean, one couldn’t be a VP, but one liked to write frivolous bills.
    They all seemed to like power. Two wanted revenge on the former president and led a group who bullied him until he retired. One wanted attention, and would do anything for his friends, especially if they had experience in the television business. And one wanted to be the president of Blinn, the real Blinn in Brenham, but she would have to move the real Blinn to the twin cities.
    But then a super heroine with real power said, “No, the administrative offices of Blinn must always be where they belong – in Brenham.” (Thank you super heroine!)
    And then one led several faculty and staff from the division of Super Snakes in Bryan to speak before the high committees. And one of the faculty lied to the high committee because she was scared of the division of Super Snakes.
    Can the two superheroines in this article contain the one with desires of power? Can they do it in time? Stay tuned for more news.

  4. Please invite Washington county Rep and Senator to this important meeting unless they are too busy. Rep Rainy seems to be batting .1000 and still at the plate.

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