As I explained in this blog entry from early  last week, the city of Pittsburg,  PA had been considering a first-in-the-nation tax on college tuition  fees. Fortunately, the city’s officials have decided not to move forward  with this highly unpopular tax increase. According to the Associated Press, they ditched the tax after two universities  and a nonprofit health insurance company agreed to make large financial  contributions to the city.
Mayor Luke Ravenstahl hopes the contributions  from the University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Mellon University or Highmark  Inc. will serve as a catalyst to get other nonprofits to help the city  financially.
Ravenstahl had called for the 1 percent  tuition tax on the city's 65,000 college students as a way of getting  money to help pay for some $15 million a year for the city's pension  obligations.
Nonprofits are exempt from most taxes,  but represent many of Pittsburgh's major employers and hold about one-third  of the city's property value.
Neither the mayor nor the three institutions  would disclose how much they would give, but Ravenstahl said he was  optimistic the money would help resolve the city's long-standing financial  problems.
"This is a leap of faith for all of us. The future of our city and our citizens is riding on it," he said.
