Oklahoma State
Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release:
May 10, 2006
State Senate Urges Congress to Pass Military Tuition Bill
State Senator Frank
Shurden passed Senate Resolution 105 through the State Senate Wednesday
urging Congress to pass H.R. 197, known as the “Military In-State
Tuition Act of 2005”. The Act, authored by U.S. Rep. David Scott
of Georgia, would amend title 10 of the United States Code to require
every state to charge in-state tuition rates at public institutions of
higher education to active-duty members of the Armed Forces and their
dependents living or stationed in that state.
“Although Oklahoma is a military-friendly state, there are others
that aren’t,” said Shurden, D-Henryetta. “There have
been cases where members of the Oklahoma military and their families have
been transferred to other states and were charged out-of-state tuition
rates at that state’s colleges and universities.”
Shurden explained that a student attending college in Oklahoma while on
full-time active duty in the armed forces is considered as having a temporary
residence in the state. Those members, along with their spouses and dependent
children, are admitted without the payment of nonresident tuition and
without the twelve-month domiciliary requirement, as along as they continue
to be stationed in the state in full-time military service and under military
orders.
H.R. 197 was brought to Shurden’s attention by U.S. retired Army
Major Jean McMillen of Shawnee who realized the tuition discrimination
when his first granddaughter, the child of active U.S. Coast Guard personnel
in Virginia, began college three years ago.
“When my granddaughter started attending a Virginia college, we
estimated that it was going to cost my daughter and her husband around
$140,000 more than other Virginia residents to send their four children
to college even though they had lived in the state for three years,”
said McMillen. “It was like my family was being punished for our
military service. I can’t believe a state would treat their military
families like this or, even worse, that the U.S. government would tolerate
such treatment.”
A copy of SR 105, which passed the Senate unanimously, will be distributed
to the Oklahoma Congressional Delegation.
“This bill is our way of showing our support for these fine men
and women that sacrifice so much for us and to make sure that no other
families are faced with the financial hardship that Major McMillen’s
was,” said Shurden. “They have little choice of where they
are stationed or how often they have to move. I think it’s a shame
that they are punished through higher tuition rates when they give so
much and are paid so little. This is yet another way we can repay them
for their service and devotion to our country.”
SB 105 is a simple resolution meaning that is does not have to be approved
by either the House or the Governor.
For more information, contact:
Senator Shurden's Office: (405) 521-5588
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