Report Title:

Tuition Waivers; UH; Hawaiian students

Description:

Requires all students of Hawaiian descent at the University of Hawaii to receive tuition waivers.

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.B. NO.

1335

TWENTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2003

 

STATE OF HAWAII

 


 

A BILL FOR AN ACT

 

relating to tuition waivers.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

SECTION 1. The legislature finds that it is becoming increasingly difficult for students of Hawaiian and part-Hawaiian ancestry to afford college tuition. As a result, many Hawaiians are forced to live in low-income housing and to receive aid from either the state or federal government. Like other indigenous peoples who have lost their sovereignty and have become disenfranchised in their homeland, many Hawaiians suffer through depressed socioeconomic conditions, including inadequate housing, poor health, and limited access to health care and education.

Although the University of Hawaii now celebrates its ninety-second year of existence with a student body that has grown and changed dramatically, one consistent fact is that Hawaiian students continue to be underrepresented within the University of Hawaii system. While Hawaiians represent twenty-three per cent of the students in public schools across the State, only 8.4 per cent of the students at the University of Hawaii are Hawaiian or part-Hawaiian. Furthermore, twenty-five per cent of Hawaiian or part-Hawaiian students within the University of Hawaii system drop out within the first two years for reasons that include rising tuition.

In 1991, the board of regents of the University of Hawaii adopted a master plan that supported efforts to increase the proportion of Hawaiian and part-Hawaiian students within the university system. The master plan also calls upon the university, "...to actively support the preservation and teaching of Hawaiian language and culture."

Though its systemwide network, including instructional buildings and campuses, marine research facilities, demonstration farms and agricultural stations, faculty and student housing, the Haleakala Observatory, and the Mauna Kea Science Reserve, the University of Hawaii now controls sixteen thousand acres of section 5(f) ceded lands on all islands. The dollar value for the use of these lands over the past ninety-two years is so great that it is almost impossible to calculate. However, it is very clear that the indigenous peoples of Hawaii have never received compensation or benefits from the University of Hawaii in return for its use of these ceded lands.

Of a total allotment of two thousand four hundred fifty one tuition waivers awarded on the Manoa campus during fiscal year 1998-1999, project Kuaana, the university office that provides assistance to Hawaiian students, was given an allocation of only one hundred ten tuition waivers to be awarded to Hawaiian students. The University of Hawaii has provided information stating there are an additional one thousand five hundred students of Hawaiian or part-Hawaiian ancestry who are qualified to receive tuition waivers on the Manoa campus alone. These students are each currently paying more than $3,000 annually, or collectively, almost $5,000,000 for their higher education.

Unlike any other financial aid package within the University of Hawaii system, financial aid offered to Hawaiians and part-Hawaiians through the University of Hawaii financial aid office is reduced proportionately when a tuition waiver or other financial assistance is awarded through an outside source such as the Kamehameha Schools/Bishop Estate, the office of Hawaiian affairs, or the Association of Hawaiian Civic Clubs.

The legislature believes that it is necessary to offer tuition waivers to those qualified students within the University of Hawaii system who are of Hawaiian or part-Hawaiian ancestry, and who could otherwise not afford to attend any college within the University of Hawaii system. Furthermore, the legislature will require that the University of Hawaii system give preference of admission to native Hawaiian and part-Hawaiian students who meet all of the University of Hawaii system standards.

The purpose of this Act is to require the University of Hawaii to award up to tuition waivers to all Hawaiian and part-Hawaiian students throughout the University of Hawaii system

SECTION 2. Chapter 304, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:

"§304- Hawaiians; tuition waiver; preference. (a) The University of Hawaii shall waive all tuition fees for all Hawaiian and part-Hawaiian students who:

(1) Provide proof of need of financial assistance; and

(2) Meet all standards and qualifications of entry into the university system.

(b) As used in this section, unless the context otherwise requires:

"Hawaiian" or "part-Hawaiian" means any descendant of the aboriginal peoples inhabiting the Hawaiian islands that exercised sovereignty and lived in the Hawaiian islands in 1778.

(c) The University of Hawaii system shall give preference in admissions to native Hawaiian and part-Hawaiian students who meet all the University of Hawaii system standards."

SECTION 3. New statutory material is underscored.

SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.

INTRODUCED BY:

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