Welcome to Fall Quarter at Shoreline Community College

Dear Shoreline Faculty and Staff:

Please review the important information below to help you help our students to get started and be successful this quarter —

Tuition Deadline for Fall Quarter (this is a new date). 

Students have until October 3 to pay their student account balance (part or in full).

Fall Quarter Drop for Non-payment 

A drop for non-payment process will take place on Tuesday, October 4, for students in the following categories:

  1. owe more than $100,
  2. have not made any payments,
  3. sign up for a Nelnet Payment Plan, or
  4. do not have a hold to prevent their classes from being dropped. 

An email message will be sent to these students at risk of being dropped on 9/28/22.

Fall Quarter Financial Aid 

There have been some serious delays in processing and issuing aid to students. Students who are enrolled and have applied for financial aid will have a hold placed on their account to prevent them from being dropped for non-payment. At the same time, the Financial Aid office will continue to review their files to determine financial aid eligibility. We are also prioritizing these students to be contacted and potentially receive aid through our secondary source (COVID Federal Relief or HEERF funds).

Please encourage our students to apply for https://www.shoreline.edu/apply-and-aid/funding-and-aid/emergency-funds.aspx and also have them check out Shoreline’s https://www.shoreline.edu/apply-and-aid/funding-and-aid/default.aspx.

We appreciate your attention to these important dates.  Please contact us if there are questions or concerns.

Shoreline Financial Aid – financialaid@shoreline.edu

Shoreline Enrollment Services – enrollmentservices@shoreline.edu

Thank you.

Phillip J. King, Ed.D.

Vice President for Student Learning, Equity, and Success

Shoreline Community College

pking@shoreline.edu

Students get tuition cut, employees get a raise

Shoreline Community College students who have already paid tuition for classes this fall may be in line for a bit of a refund, thanks to the new state budget, signed late Tuesday, June 30, 2015 by Gov. Jay Inslee.

The state budget, which took three special legislative sessions, includes a 5 percent tuition decrease for students at two-year colleges this fall. The state budget takes effect July 1, but the reduction doesn’t impact tuition paid for this summer quarter, which is currently underway.

Shoreline President Cheryl Roberts said she’s grateful for the Legislature’s realization that students were being hurt by sharp increases in the state-mandated tuition rates. During the recent economic downturn, lawmakers pulled money away from community and technical colleges and made up the difference by setting higher and higher tuition rates for students. In this budget, the Legislature did just the opposite, reducing tuition and backfilling with state funds to the colleges.

“This budget reverses the trend of placing an increased burden on the backs of students,” Roberts said. “Our legislators are acknowledging that investing in students at community and technical colleges is an investment that pays off for everyone in the state of Washington.”

The state budget also calls for two-year college tuition to remain flat for the 2016-17 fiscal year.

The amount students actually pay is a combination of tuition and fees. At the June 24 meeting, Shoreline’s Board of Trustees approved several fee increases, including an increase to the services and activities fee that is part of tuition. Shoreline officials are waiting for official notice from the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges on how the 5-percent decrease will be applied and will then work to determine how tuition refunds would be calculated. Affected students will receive notifications from the college.

Tuition at four-year institutions, which were already much higher, would also see 5 percent cuts in the first year of the new biennium. Students at the University of Washington and Washington State University get another 10 percent reduction in the second year, while students at Western, Central and Eastern Washington universities will see an additional 15 percent tuition cut in the second year.

College employees will receive a 3 percent cost of living increase in 2015-16 and another 1.8 percent increase in the following year.

Officials at Shoreline and the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges continue to pore over the state budget document to better understand the details and implications of the difficult choices made by lawmakers and the governor that culminated in an agreement over this past weekend.

“While some of these are significant adjustments to the funding formula for the college, we’re very pleased that the Legislature reached a compromise and passed a budget,” Roberts said. “Now, we can focus on serving our students and our communities.”