Minnesota State Grant faces $102M shortfall
Minnesota’s largest college financial-aid program is projecting a $102 million deficit in the current biennium, and officials say awards may need to be reduced again in coming semesters. The Office of Higher Education cites higher enrollment (+4,000 students), more recipients (+2,200), and FAFSA-driven need and Pell changes as key drivers, following July fixes that boosted funding by $44.5M but cut average awards by $475 after addressing a prior $239M shortfall. Lawmakers signaled hearings are likely, with Rep. Marion Rarick warning rationing may be unavoidable while OHE advises families not to be overly worried.
📌 Key Facts
- $102 million projected deficit for the Minnesota State Grant in the current biennium
- Average awards already reduced by $475 this fall after July formula changes; prior shortfall was $239 million
- Drivers include ~4,000 more students enrolled, ~2,200 more recipients, and FAFSA/Pell changes increasing calculated need
- Legislature added $44.5 million in July; additional measures like North Star Promise and Direct Admissions boosted enrollment
- Rep. Marion Rarick says further rationing likely; OHE’s Nicole Whelan urges caution but not panic