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Higher Ed Groups Weigh In on Minimum Wage Debate

Higher Ed Groups Weigh In on Minimum Wage Debate
Suggest federal work-study be adjusted to remain competitive
with the expected increase.

By Charles Dervarics

For students, it’s a potential windfall. But for colleges, a long-discussed increase in the federal minimum wage may become the latest challenge for the federal work-study program, which offers low-income students an opportunity for additional financial aid in exchange for part-time work.

The U.S. House and Senate have each approved an increase in the minimum wage, from $5.15 to $7.25 an hour, which would increase pay rates for many students. While Congress is still debating the fine points
of the bill, many higher education organizations say work-study will need more federal support to pay the higher wages.

“When Congress raises the minimum wage, we want to maintain the same number of jobs,” says Larry Zaglaniczny, the congressional relations director at the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators in Washington, D.C. Congress and President Bush have frozen program funding at $980 million in recent years, but Zaglaniczny says advocates are seeking a sizable increase, to $1.25 billion next year.

Under work-study, the federal government provides up to 75 percent of the cost of on-campus jobs for lower-income students. Colleges and universities put up the other 25 percent. But while federal funding has remained stagnant, many colleges already have had to increase their financial commitments. According to Zaglaniczny, 22 states have enacted minimum wage increases above the $5.15 federal rate.

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