WHY is it so hard for people to do the right thing? I am a veteran and after signing up for the Post 9/11 GI Bill I left a successful military career to pursue an undergraduate degree. After a year in school, Congress decided they would no longer fund out of state tuition for veteran students. Unfortunately, I am out of state since I go to school in North Carolina but am a resident of California. I must now either take out loans to finish my "free education" the government contractually promised me or leave school to support my family.
Of course some states' legislatures, seven I believe, immediately sprung into action to correct this tragedy. But NOT North Carolina. North Carolina can't seem to figure out the right thing to do and grant veterans residency for tuition purposes. My school keeps telling me and the 79 other vets affected by this disappearance of funding that the laws preclude them from granting immediate state residency but if we will work on the large checklist of residency "acts" we can be considered for residency. Many have tried and were not awarded residency for various "legal" reasons.
How can the state legislators, governor of North Carolina and president of the UNC system be in no great hurry to correct this problem? It boggles the mind that a state with such a large military presence would be so slow to help veterans who CHOSE to stay in North Carolina to go to school.
It is a shame but it leads me to think that it is all about the money the state would lose. At my particular institution the difference in in-state and non-resident tuitions is about $11,000. Just at my school alone the state would stand to lose $880,000 if residency for tuition purposes were granted to veterans.
Maybe I am wrong in assuming the right thing to do would be for North Carolina to rapidly adjust its tuition policies to accommodate those men and women who have risked their lives and sacrificed their liberties. Maybe it is unfair to think the state should have to fix a federal problem. I don't know. I only know that I owe an extra $11,000 that I did not plan on owing.
Perhaps, the biggest tragedy is Congress thinking this would be ok to make a deal with the men and women (and their families) and then bait and switch at their convenience. I swore an oath to support and defend the Constitution of this country from all enemies foreign and domestic. I imagined the foreign enemy part would be some Muslim extremist bent on destroying my counrty's way of life. I had no idea that a domestic enemy even existed or that it would be a nicely suited elected official.
Is it unfair or unreasonable that I and other veterans be given a little break to complete our educational goals? Americans are supposedly guaranteed the rights to "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness." I guess that doesn't apply to veterans who took their government at its word and chose to go to schools that would fit their desires and needs.
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