Bill Text: IN HB1348 | 2013 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Administration of scholarships and grants.
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Republican 3-1)
Status: (Passed) 2013-05-13 - Public Law 281 [HB1348 Detail]
Download: Indiana-2013-HB1348-Amended.html
Citations Affected: IC 21-7; IC 21-12; IC 21-13; IC 21-14;
IC 21-18.5.
Effective: Upon passage; July 1, 2013; September 1, 2013.
January 17, 2013, read first time and referred to Committee on Education.
February 11, 2013, amended, reported _ Do Pass.
February 20, 2013, read second time, amended, ordered engrossed.
Digest Continued
safety officer killed in the line of duty. (Current law provides that the limit for eligibility is eight semesters or 12 quarters.) Makes changes to the grade point average requirements for students who receive a higher education award or participate in the twenty-first century scholars program. Repeals provisions relating to: (1) the duties of the Indiana college placement and assessment center; and (2) a requirement that the commission shall provide a statistical report that describes twenty-first century scholar awards. Adds definition of "degree map". Provides that, not later than August 1, 2013, the commission for higher education (commission) shall develop guidelines or rules to provide a state educational institution guidance for establishing degree maps for each full-time student attending the state educational institution. Requires, for a full-time student that enrolls after July 31, 2014, that a state educational institution develop a degree map based on the student's specific educational objective or course of study. Requires a state educational institution to ensure that courses necessary for the student to comply with the student's degree map are available for the student during the academic term in which the student is required to complete the particular course in accordance with the student's degree map. Provides that a state educational institution must provide a course to the student at no cost during the next academic term in which the course is offered if: (1) the state educational institution does not offer a course which the student must take to comply with the student's degree map during the current academic term; (2) the timing of the course conflicts with other courses the student is required to take to comply with the student's degree map for the current academic term; or (3) the course is full. Establishes a performance grant for a student that attends a state educational institution if the student earns either a baccalaureate or associate degree on or before the date the student is expected to earn the degree pursuant to the student's degree map. Establishes the completion incentive fund. Provides that the performance grant shall be paid for by the commission from the completion incentive fund. Makes conforming amendments.
PRINTING CODE. Amendments: Whenever an existing statute (or a section of the Indiana Constitution) is being amended, the text of the existing provision will appear in this style type, additions will appear in this style type, and deletions will appear in
Additions: Whenever a new statutory provision is being enacted (or a new constitutional provision adopted), the text of the new provision will appear in this style type. Also, the word NEW will appear in that style type in the introductory clause of each SECTION that adds a new provision to the Indiana Code or the Indiana Constitution.
Conflict reconciliation: Text in a statute in this style type or
A BILL FOR AN ACT to amend the Indiana Code concerning
education.
(1) a baccalaureate degree within four (4) academic years; or
(2) an associate degree within two (2) academic years;
in the student's intended field of study. The reference must specify the expected date that the student will earn a baccalaureate degree or an associate degree and the academic requirements that a student should complete each academic year to timely earn a degree.
SEPTEMBER 1, 2013]: Sec. 2. "Academic term" means a semester, a
trimester, or a quarter, whichever applies or any other equivalent
term set forth by an eligible institution and used to divide an
academic year into periods in which classes are held.
Chapter 1.7. Establishment of Award Amounts by the Commission for Higher Education
Sec. 1. (a) This section applies to an academic year beginning after August 31, 2014. The commission shall publish annually a schedule of award amounts for the higher education award and freedom of choice grant issued under this article. The schedule must provide award amounts on the basis of the recipient's expected family contribution. The expected family contribution shall be derived from information submitted on the recipient's financial aid application form. The commission shall determine award amounts separately for:
(1) recipients attending approved public state educational institutions;
(2) recipients attending a nonprofit college or university that provides a four (4) year education program for which the nonprofit college or university awards a baccalaureate or more advanced degree, including:
(A) Ancilla College;
(B) Anderson University;
(C) Bethel College;
(D) Butler University;
(E) Calumet College of St. Joseph;
(F) DePauw University;
(G) Earlham College;
(H) Franklin College;
(I) Goshen College;
(J) Grace College;
(K) Hanover College;
(L) Holy Cross College;
(M) Huntington University;
(N) Indiana Tech;
(O) Indiana Wesleyan University;
(P) Manchester College;
(Q) Marian University;
(R) Martin University;
(S) Oakland City University;
(T) Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology;
(U) Saint Joseph's College;
(V) Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College;
(W) Saint Mary's College;
(X) Taylor University;
(Y) Trine University;
(Z) the University of Evansville;
(AA) the University of Indianapolis;
(BB) the University of Notre Dame;
(CC) the University of Saint Francis;
(DD) Valparaiso University; and
(EE) Wabash College; and
(3) recipients attending approved postsecondary credit-bearing proprietary institutions.
(b) The schedule of award amounts published under subsection (a) must offer a larger award to a recipient who, as of the student's most recently concluded academic year, has successfully completed:
(1) at least thirty (30) credit hours or the equivalent by the end of the student's first academic year;
(2) at least sixty (60) credit hours or the equivalent by the end of the student's second academic year; or
(3) at least ninety (90) credit hours or the equivalent by the end of the student's third academic year.
(c) The schedule of award amounts published under subsection (a) may be organized to group award recipients by the amount to be contributed by the recipients. The contribution amounts may be set at increments of up to five hundred dollars ($500).
(d) This subsection expires September 1, 2016. A student that initially enrolls in an eligible institution for an academic year
beginning before September 1, 2013, is eligible for the larger award
determined under subsection (b) regardless of the student's credit
completion.
Sec. 2. (a) This section applies to a student who initially enrolls
in an eligible institution for an academic year beginning after
August 31, 2013.
(b) This subsection applies to an award offered to a recipient for
the recipient's first academic year. The commission shall offer an
additional award to a recipient who graduated from high school
with an academic honors diploma.
(c) This subsection applies to an award offered to a recipient for
an academic year after the recipient's first academic year. The
commission shall offer one (1) or more additional awards to a
recipient who:
(1) maintained a cumulative grade point average of at least
3.0 on a 4.0 grading scale or its equivalent as established by
the eligible institution, based on the most recently concluded
academic year;
(2) received an associate degree before enrolling in a
baccalaureate degree program; or
(3) earned at least thirty-nine (39) credit hours or the
equivalent during the most recently concluded academic year.
(d) The commission may establish one (1) or more student
performance incentives in addition to those listed under subsection
(c).
(e) The commission shall determine the amount of each
incentive bonus annually, based on the available appropriation.
Sec. 3. (a) As used in this section, "annual award amount" refers
to:
(1) for a recipient of a Frank O'Bannon award, the amount a
recipient is entitled to receive under sections 1 and 2 of this
chapter; or
(2) for a recipient of a twenty-first century scholars award,
the amount prescribed under IC 21-12-6.
(b) The annual award amount may be used in any of the
academic terms offered by an eligible institution, including
summer terms.
(c) An eligible institution, in consultation with the recipient, may
reserve up to one hundred percent (100%) of a recipient's annual
award amount for use in the summer.
SEPTEMBER 1, 2013]: Sec. 1. (a) An applicant is eligible for a first
year higher education award under this chapter if the student meets the
following requirements:
(1) The applicant is a resident of Indiana, as defined by the
commission.
(2) The applicant:
(A) has successfully completed the program of instruction at
an approved secondary school;
(B) has been granted a:
(i) high school equivalency certificate before July 1, 1995;
or
(ii) state of Indiana general educational development (GED)
diploma under IC 20-10.1-12.1 (before its repeal),
IC 20-20-6 (before its repeal), or IC 22-4.1-18; or
(C) is a student in good standing at an approved secondary
school and is engaged in a program that in due course will be
completed by the end of the current academic year.
(3) The financial resources reasonably available to the applicant,
as defined by the commission, are such that, in the absence of a
higher education award under this chapter, the applicant would be
deterred from completing the applicant's education at the
approved postsecondary educational institution that the applicant
has selected and that has accepted the applicant. In determining
the financial resources reasonably available to an applicant to
whom IC 21-18.5-4-8 applies, the commission must consider the
financial resources of the applicant's legal parent.
(4) The applicant will use the award initially at that approved
postsecondary educational institution.
(5) If the student is already enrolled in an approved postsecondary
educational institution, the applicant must be a full-time student
and be making satisfactory progress, as determined by the
commission, toward a first baccalaureate degree.
(6) The student declares, in writing, a specific educational
objective or course of study and enrolls in:
(A) courses that apply toward the requirements for completion
of that objective or course of study; or
(B) courses designed to help the student develop the basic
skills that the student needs to successfully achieve that
objective or continue in that course of study.
(7) The student is not eligible to receive any of the following
for the same academic year:
(A) A twenty-first century scholarship under IC 21-12-6.
(B) A grant from the National Guard tuition supplement
program under IC 21-13-4.
(C) A grant from the National Guard scholarship extension
program under IC 21-13-5.
(b) This subsection applies to an individual who:
(1) meets the requirements set forth in subsection (a); and
(2) before the date that eligibility is determined by the
commission, has been placed by or with the consent of the
department of child services, by a court order, or by a licensed
child placing agency in:
(A) a foster family home;
(B) the home of a relative or other unlicensed caretaker;
(C) a child caring institution; or
(D) a group home.
The commission shall consider an individual to whom this subsection
applies as a full-need student under the commission's rules when
determining the eligibility of the individual to receive financial aid
administered by the commission under this chapter.
(b) The maximum amount of a grant that may be offered to an eligible student in a program at a postsecondary credit bearing proprietary educational institution is equal to the maximum amount of an award the student could receive under this chapter if the student were enrolled at Ivy Tech Community College.
(c) This section expires July 1, 2014.
of three (3) undergraduate academic years following the academic year
of the first award or until an earlier time as the student receives a
degree normally obtained in four (4) undergraduate academic years. A
higher education award for a student in a program leading to a
technical certificate or an undergraduate associate degree may be
renewed for the number of academic years normally required to obtain
a certificate or degree in the student's program. The commission may
grant a renewal only upon application and only upon its finding that:
(1) the applicant has successfully completed the work of a
preceding year;
(2) the applicant remains domiciled in Indiana;
(3) the recipient's financial situation continues to warrant an
award, based on the financial requirements set forth in section
(1)(a)(3) of this chapter;
(4) the applicant is eligible under section 2 of this chapter; and
(5) subject to subsection (b), if the student initially enrolls in an
eligible institution for a semester (or its equivalent) beginning
after June 30, 2012, the student maintains at least the following
cumulative grade point average:
(A) For credit hours applicable to the equivalent of the
applicant's freshman academic year, a cumulative grade point
average that the eligible institution determines is satisfactory
academic progress; and
(B) For credit hours applicable to the equivalent of the
applicant's sophomore academic year, a cumulative grade
point average of 2.25 on a 4.0 grading scale or its equivalent
as established by the eligible institution.
(C) For credit hours applicable to the equivalent of the
applicant's junior or senior academic year, a cumulative grade
point average of 2.5 on a 4.0 grading scale or its equivalent as
established by the eligible institution;
(6) if the student initially enrolls in an eligible institution for
an academic year beginning after August 31, 2013, the student
successfully completes:
(A) at least twenty-four (24) credit hours or the equivalent
by the end of the student's first academic year;
(B) at least forty-eight (48) credit hours or the equivalent
by the end of the student's second academic year; and
(C) at least seventy-two (72) credit hours or the equivalent
by the end of the student's third academic year.
A recipient who fails to meet the credit hour requirement for
a particular academic year becomes ineligible for an award
during the next academic year. The recipient may regain
eligibility for an award in subsequent academic years if the
recipient meets the aggregate credit hour requirements
commensurate with the recipient's academic standing.
(b) After the first semester or its equivalent at the eligible institution
that a person does not achieve the requisite cumulative grade point
average specified in subsection (a)(5), the person is considered to be on
probation and must achieve the requisite cumulative grade point
average by the next semester or its equivalent at the eligible institution
in order to continue to receive benefits under this chapter.
(b) Beginning in an academic year beginning after August 31, 2014, a student who graduated from high school with an academic honors diploma is entitled to receive the following additional award amount each academic year:
(1) For a student attending Ivy Tech Community College or a postsecondary credit bearing proprietary educational institution, seven hundred dollars ($700).
(2) For a student attending a state educational institution, eight hundred dollars ($800).
(3) For a student attending a nonprofit college or university, one thousand four hundred dollars ($1,400).
(c) This section expires September 1, 2016.
(1) sections 1, 2, and (if applicable)
(2) sections 4, 5, and (if applicable)
The awards shall be handled on the same basis as renewals under section 9 of this chapter.
SECTION 253, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS
[EFFECTIVE JULY 1, 2013]: Sec. 11. (a) A higher education award
issued under this section and sections 8, 9, and 10 of this chapter
extends to all educational costs for the academic year for which the
award is made, but only to the extent of:
(1) current financial need (as measured under section 1(3) of this
chapter); or
(2) the maximum fees regularly assessed to resident
undergraduates at any state educational institution, as determined
annually by the commission;
whichever is smaller.
(b) This section expires September 1, 2014.
(1) the person is qualified for a higher education award under the terms of IC 21-12-3-1, IC 21-12-3-2, and IC 21-12-3-3 or IC 21-12-3-4,
(2) for a freedom of choice grant awarded before September 1, 2014, the person has a financial need that exceeds the award, as determined in accordance with:
(A) this chapter, IC 21-18.5-4, IC 21-12-2, and IC 21-12-3; and
(B) the rules of the commission; and
(3) the person will attend an approved postsecondary educational institution that:
(A) either:
(i) operates in Indiana, provides an organized two (2) year or longer program of collegiate grade directly creditable toward a baccalaureate degree, is operated by a nonprofit entity, and is accredited by a recognized regional accrediting agency or the board for proprietary education under IC 21-18.5-6; or
(ii) is a hospital that operates a nursing diploma program that is accredited by the Indiana state board of nursing; and
(B) is operated privately and not administered or controlled by any state agency or entity.
may not exceed the difference between:
(1) the amount of the total financial need of the student, as
determined under the commission's rules; and
(2) the:
(A) higher education award made under IC 21-12-3-1,
IC 21-12-3-2, and IC 21-12-3-3 or IC 21-12-3-4 and
IC 21-12-3-5; or
(B) sum necessary to pay educational costs at the institution;
whichever is smaller.
(b) This subsection applies after August 31, 2014. The freedom
of choice grant is the amount published under IC 21-12-1.7 for
recipients attending an institution described in IC 21-12-4-2.
(1) Submit to the commission a renewal application that contains all the information and evidence required by the commission to determine eligibility for the scholarship renewal.
(2) Continue to be enrolled as a full-time student in good standing at an eligible institution.
(3) This subdivision applies only to applicants who initially enroll in the program under section 5 of this chapter or IC 21-12-6.5-2 after June 30, 2011. For purposes of this chapter, applicants who are enrolled in the program before July 1, 2011, will not have an income or financial resources test applied to them when they subsequently apply to renew a scholarship. Continue to have a lack of financial resources reasonably available to the applicant, as defined by the commission, that, in the absence of an award under this chapter, would deter the scholarship applicant from completing the applicant's education at the approved
postsecondary educational institution that the applicant has
selected and that has accepted the applicant.
(4) Subject to subsection (b), If the student initially enrolls in an
eligible institution for a semester (or its equivalent) beginning
after June 30, 2012, maintain at least the following cumulative
grade point average:
(A) For credit hours applicable to the equivalent of the
applicant's freshman academic year, a cumulative grade point
average that the eligible institution determines is satisfactory
academic progress.
(B) For credit hours applicable to the equivalent of the
applicant's sophomore academic year, a cumulative grade
point average of 2.25 on a 4.0 grading scale or its equivalent
as established by the eligible institution.
(C) For credit hours applicable to the equivalent of the
applicant's junior or senior academic year, a cumulative grade
point average of 2.5 on a 4.0 grading scale or its equivalent as
established by the eligible institution.
(5) If the student initially enrolls in an eligible institution for
an academic year beginning after August 31, 2013, the student
successfully completes:
(A) at least thirty (30) credit hours or the equivalent by the
end of the student's first academic year;
(B) at least sixty (60) credit hours or the equivalent by the
end of the student's second academic year; and
(C) at least ninety (90) credit hours or the equivalent by
the end of the student's third academic year.
A recipient who fails to meet the credit hour requirement for
a particular academic year becomes ineligible for an award
during the next academic year. The recipient may become
eligible for an award in subsequent academic years if that
recipient meets the aggregate credit hour requirements
commensurate with the recipient's academic standing.
(5) (6) Continue to meet any other minimum criteria established
by the commission.
(b) After the first semester or its equivalent at the eligible institution
that a person does not achieve the requisite cumulative grade point
average specified in subsection (a)(4), the person is considered to be on
probation and must achieve the requisite cumulative grade point
average by the next semester or its equivalent at the eligible institution
in order to continue to receive benefits under this chapter.
SECTION 253, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS
[EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 1, 2013]: Sec. 8. A scholarship may be
renewed under this chapter for a total scholarship award that does not
exceed the equivalent of eight (8) semesters. the number of academic
terms that constitutes four (4) undergraduate academic years.
(b) A scholarship applicant shall be awarded the following amount as adjusted under subsections (c) and (d):
(1) If the scholarship applicant attends an approved postsecondary educational institution that is a state educational institution, the full educational costs that the scholarship applicant would otherwise be required to pay at the eligible institution.
(2) If the scholarship applicant attends an approved postsecondary educational institution that is private, the lesser of the educational costs that the scholarship applicant would otherwise be required to pay at the private eligible institution, or the average of the educational costs of all state educational institutions, not including Ivy Tech Community College.
(3) If the scholarship applicant attends an approved postsecondary educational institution that is a postsecondary credit bearing proprietary educational institution, the lesser of the educational costs that the scholarship applicant would otherwise be required to pay at the postsecondary credit bearing proprietary educational institution or the educational costs of Ivy Tech Community College.
(c) The amount of an award under subsection (b) shall be reduced by:
(1) for an amount awarded before September 1, 2014:
(2) for an amount awarded after August 31, 2014, the amount
based on the expected family contribution, if necessary, as
determined by the commission, to provide scholarships within
the available appropriation.
(d) The total of all tuition scholarships awarded under this section
in a state fiscal year may not exceed the amount available for
distribution from the fund for scholarships under this chapter. If the
total amount to be distributed from the fund in a state fiscal year
exceeds the amount available for distribution, the amount to be
distributed to each eligible applicant shall be proportionately reduced
so that the total reductions equal the amount of the excess based on the
relative financial need of each eligible applicant.
(1) The applicant is domiciled in Indiana, as defined by the commission.
(2) The applicant:
(A) has received a diploma of graduation from an approved secondary school;
(B) has been granted a:
(i) high school equivalency certificate before July 1, 1995; or
(ii) state of Indiana general educational development (GED) diploma under IC 20-10.1-12.1 (before its repeal), IC 20-20-6 (before its repeal), or IC 22-4.1-18; or
(C) is a student in good standing who is completing a final year of study at an approved secondary school and will be eligible upon graduation to attend an approved institution of higher learning.
(3) The applicant declares, in writing, a specific educational objective or course of study and enrolls in:
(A) a course that applies toward the requirements for completion of that objective or course of study; or
(B) a course designed to help the applicant develop the basic skills the applicant needs to successfully achieve that objective or continue in that course of study.
(4) The applicant enrolls in at least
(5) The commission or an approved postsecondary educational institution acting as the commission's agent determines that the financial resources available to the applicant are such that in the absence of a grant under this chapter the applicant would be deterred from beginning or completing the applicant's declared educational objective or course of study.
(6) The applicant has not received a Frank O'Bannon grant for the maximum number of academic terms.
(b) The commission shall reduce an award offered under this section by the amount the applicant is eligible to receive in tuition reimbursement from an employer or another outside source.
(1) For a student who initially enrolls in an eligible institution before September 1, 2013:
(A) makes satisfactory progress toward a certificate, nursing diploma, associate degree, or baccalaureate degree; and
(2) For a student who initially enrolls in an eligible institution for an academic year beginning after August 31, 2013:
(A) successfully completes at least eighteen (18) credit hours or their equivalent toward a certificate, nursing diploma, associate degree, or baccalaureate degree in the
previous academic year;
(B) demonstrates continuing financial need; and
(C) maintains at least a cumulative grade point average
that the eligible institution determines is satisfactory
academic progress.
(b) A scholarship awarded under this chapter may be used only for the payment of tuition or fees that are:
(1) approved by the state educational institution that awards the scholarship; and
(2) not otherwise payable under any other scholarship or form of financial assistance specifically designated for tuition or fees.
(c) Subject to section 8(c) of this chapter, each scholarship awarded under this chapter is renewable under section 9 of this chapter for a total number of terms that does not exceed
(1) is a resident of Indiana, as defined by the commission;
(2) attended a publicly supported school on a full-time equivalency basis (as defined in IC 20-43-1-14) for at least the last two (2) semesters before the individual graduated from high
school;
(3) had legal settlement (as defined in IC 20-18-2-11) in Indiana
for at least the last two (2) semesters before the individual
graduated from high school;
(4) met at least the minimum requirements set by the Indiana state
board of education for granting a high school diploma by the end
of grade 11 (including any summer school courses completed
before July 1 of a year) and was awarded after December 31,
2010, a high school diploma by the publicly supported school that
the individual last attended for course credits earned before the
end of grade 11;
(5) was not enrolled in a publicly supported school for any part of
grade 12;
(6) applies to the commission for a Mitch Daniels early
graduation scholarship in the manner specified by the
commission; and
(7) within five (5) months after graduating from high school:
(A) becomes a student in good standing at an approved
postsecondary educational institution whose students are
eligible to receive, before September 1, 2014, a higher
education award (IC 21-12-3-11) or a freedom of choice grant
(IC 21-12-4-4), or, after August 31, 2014, a higher
education award or freedom of choice grant published
under IC 21-12-1.7-1; and
(B) is engaged in a program that will lead to an approved
postsecondary degree or credential.
(1) IC 10-12-2-6.
(2) IC 10-12-2-11.
(3) IC 10-17-7.
(4) IC 21-14-4.
(5) IC 21-14-6-3.
(6) IC 21-14-7.
(7) IC 21-14-10.
(b) Except as provided in
within eight (8) years after the date the individual first applies and
becomes eligible for benefits under the applicable law.
(1) IC 21-12-3.
(2) IC 21-12-4.
(3) IC 21-12-6.
(4) IC 21-12-8.
(5) IC 21-12-9.
(6) IC 21-13-2.
(7) IC 21-13-3.
(8) IC 21-13-4.
(9) IC 21-14-5.
(10) IC 21-14-6-2.
(b) Except as provided in
Chapter 14. Degree Maps
Sec. 1. Not later than August 1, 2013, the commission shall develop guidelines or rules under IC 4-22-2, in consultation with state educational institutions, to provide a state educational institution guidance for establishing degree maps for each full-time student attending the state educational institution. The commission may adopt emergency rules in the manner set forth in IC 4-22-2-37.1. The rules or guidelines must include:
(1) procedures for establishing a degree map with a student,
including requirements for adjusting a degree map in
situations in which the student changes the student's field of
study;
(2) requirements and guidance for a state educational
institution to determine when the state educational institution
must offer a course at no cost to a student under section 3 of
this chapter;
(3) requirements for excusing a student from complying with
the student's degree map described in this section; and
(4) any provision the commission determines is necessary to
implement this chapter.
Sec. 2. This section applies to a student who initially enrolls in
a state educational institution after July 31, 2014. A state
educational institution shall develop a degree map for each
full-time student based on the student's specific educational
objective or course of study. A full-time student's degree map must
contain:
(1) an academic term by academic term sequence of course
options that will allow the full-time student to complete either:
(A) a baccalaureate degree within four (4) academic years;
or
(B) an associate degree within two (2) academic years;
in the student's intended field of study;
(2) the expected date that the student will earn a
baccalaureate degree or an associate's degree described in
subdivision (1);
(3) the academic requirements that a student must complete
each academic year to timely earn a degree described in
subdivision (1); and
(4) any information the commission determines is appropriate
under section 1 of this chapter.
Sec. 3. This section applies to a student who initially enrolls in
a state educational institution after July 31, 2014. A state
educational institution shall ensure that courses necessary for the
student to comply with the student's degree map are available for
the student during the academic term in which the student is
required to complete the particular course. If a student who
complies with the student's degree map is unable to take a course
required under the student's degree map for the current academic
term because:
(1) the state educational institution does not offer the course
during that particular academic term; or
(2) the student is unable to enroll in the course:
(A) because the course times at which the course is offered
conflict with other course requirements specified for the
current academic term in the student's degree map; or
(B) because the course is full;
the state educational institution shall provide the particular course
to the student at no cost during the next available academic term
in which the course is offered.
Sec. 4. (a) The completion incentive fund is established to
provide performance grants under section 5 of this chapter.
(b) The completion incentive fund shall be administered by the
commission.
(c) The fund consists of money appropriated to the fund by the
general assembly.
(d) The treasurer of state shall invest the money in the fund not
currently needed to meet the obligations of the fund in the same
manner as other public funds may be invested.
(e) Money in the fund at the end of a state fiscal year does not
revert to the state general fund but remains in the fund to be used
exclusively for purposes of section 5 of this chapter.
Sec. 5. (a) This section applies to a resident student who initially
enrolls in a state educational institution after July 31, 2014. A
full-time resident undergraduate student is entitled to a
performance grant for earning a baccalaureate degree or an
associate degree at a state educational institution if the student
earns the degree on or before the date the student is expected to
earn the degree under the student's degree map. The performance
grant shall be paid by the commission from the completion
incentive fund established in section 4 of this chapter.
(b) The amount of performance grant under subsection (a) is as
follows:
(1) If the student earns a baccalaureate degree in the
academic term in which the student is expected to earn the
degree pursuant to the student's degree map, one thousand
dollars ($1,000).
(2) If the student earns an associate degree in the academic
term in which the student is expected to earn the degree
pursuant to the student's degree map, seven hundred fifty
dollars ($750).
(3) If the student earns a baccalaureate degree at least one (1)
academic term before the academic term in which the student
is expected to earn the baccalaureate degree under the
student's degree map, one thousand five hundred dollars
($1,500).
(4) If the student earns an associate degree at least one (1)
academic term before the academic term in which the student
is expected to earn the associate degree under the student's
degree map, one thousand two hundred fifty dollars ($1,250).
(c) To receive a grant under this section, the student must apply
to the commission on a form and in a manner prescribed by the
commission within sixty (60) days after the date the student earns
the degree.
(d) A student may receive only one (1) performance grant under
this section.
(1) may be renewed under this chapter for a total scholarship award that does not exceed the equivalent of
(2) is subject to other eligibility criteria as established by the commission.
SECTION 1, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE
SEPTEMBER 1, 2013]: Sec. 2. (a) This section applies to a public
safety officer's child who is less than twenty-four (24) years of age on
the date of the public safety officer's death. The children of a public
safety officer who has been killed in the line of duty are exempt from
the payment of tuition and regularly assessed fees for eight (8)
semesters (or the equivalent) the number of terms that constitutes
four (4) undergraduate academic years in which the children enroll
at a state educational institution or state supported technical school.
The children must be full-time students pursuing a prescribed course
of study.
(b) The maximum amount that an eligible applicant is exempt from
paying for a semester hour is an amount equal to the cost of an
undergraduate semester credit hour at the state educational institution
in which the eligible applicant enrolls.
(1) lawful;
(2) in the state's best interests; and
(3) generally consistent with the commission's programs and purposes.
If the commission agrees to a stipulation on the use of donated funds, the commission and the donor, subject to approval by the budget agency and the governor or the governor's designee, shall execute an agreement.