Showing posts with label tuition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tuition. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Dad Won't Pay For College, So Daughter Sues

When you read a headline saying a daughter is suing their parent for not paying their tuition, your first instinct is probably to laugh out loud. However, one Connecticut woman not only sued her Father for not paying her college tuition for her senior year, she also won! Read all the details in the NPR.org story below.

A woman in Connecticut sued her father for failing to pay her tuition for her senior year of college. She won.

Her dad had to pay $47,000, according to the Connecticut Law Tribune.

In a 2004 divorce, the father agreed to pay for the education of his three children. The daughter persuaded to him to sign a contract agreeing to pay for tuition as well as expenses such as books and car insurance.

The father paid for the first few years of the daughter's education at Southern Connecticut State University. But he refused to pay for her senior year, according to the article.

So the daughter took out a loan for $20,000 to pay for school, and sued her father for breach of contract.

The case went to trial. The father argued that the daughter failed to attend classes full time and didn't give him receipts for tuition other expenses. And, he argued, she dropped classes and kept the refunds for herself.

The judge didn't buy it. He ruled that the daughter "performed all of her obligations as set forth" in the contract, and that the father failed to prove his arguments.

The $47,000 payment includes the loan, interest, attorney fees and missed car insurance payments, the daughter's attorney told the Law Tribune.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Pittsburgh Won't Tax Tuition; Nonprofits to Donate

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.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

A First-in-the-Nation Tax on College Tuition

Tuition fee increases are fairly common on college campuses lately, despite the uproar they usually provoke from students. However, the city of Pittsburgh is considering a different way to increase revenue from college tuition. They are hoping to impose a 1% local tax on tuition, which would make Pittsburgh the first place in the country to ever tax college tuition fees.

This announcement has frightened students, and taxpayers across the nation who fear that if the measure is passed that it will set an example for other government agencies to follow suit. According to the New York Times the Pittsburgh City Council is set to vote on the tax on Monday, which is expected to generate over $16 million in additional revenue for the city.

“It’s really a disappointment that we’re in this situation,” Mr. Ravenstahl said. “Our colleges and universities are giving less and less while they increase tuition and executive pay and expand their campuses, removing high-value land from the tax rolls. The cost to provide public safety and public works services continues to increase, but our revenue continues to decrease.”

The tax, which would take effect as early as July, would range from about $20 a year for students at cheaper schools like the Community College of Allegheny County to just over $400 for students at the city’s priciest university, Carnegie Mellon.

Other cities, like Boston and Providence, R.I., have also considered taxing college tuition, Mr. Urbina reports.

Thursday, December 14, 2006

College Tuition Tax Deduction Extended

"The federally run College Tuition Tax Deduction program, which a month ago teetered precariously close to termination, was renewed last weekend, extending its life for another two years." For more information click here.

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