By Steve Hallock
What ought to be an exciting time in a student's life, the beginning of university classes, is more daunting this year. Thanks to cuts in education spending, in-state students at Temple University face a roughly 10 percent tuition increase. University of Pittsburgh resident students will pay 8.5 percent more; Penn State students 4.9 percent more; and resident students of the state-owned universities 7.5 percent more.
Meanwhile, the governor's Marcellus Shale Advisory Commission has put forth 96 recommendations on how the state should deal with this natural-gas boom. If only the good-news road of this industrial boon could intersect with the bad-news highway of education cost-cutting. But even though the commission's recommendations include the levy of a fee on natural-gas companies, that money is to be earmarked for communities hosting the drilling and production. The governor has nixed any severance tax on this abundant natural resource.