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Snow College emphasizes rural mission, low tuition and TechConnect pathways in briefing to appropriations subcommittee
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Summary
Snow College told lawmakers it serves rural counties with low tuition and a dual mission, highlighted TechConnect and CDL growth, and asked to apply performance funding to public safety and student success tools to sustain completion gains.
Snow College presented to the Higher Education Appropriation Subcommittee on Jan. 26, foregrounding the institution’s rural service area, very low tuition and an expanding set of technical-to-degree pathways.
President Stacy McKiff told the committee Snow serves six largely rural counties totaling roughly 16,000 square miles, educates about 5,500 students and carries the lowest degree‑granting tuition in the state: “degree granting tuition at $22.19,” she said, and noted the technical college tuition is $85 per credit hour. McKiff said 84% of Snow students are Utah residents, 60% come from rural counties and 44% are first‑generation college students.
McKiff described Snow’s dual mission — technical education and degree programs — and highlighted several workforce-focused initiatives. The college’s TechConnect program has enrolled students who finished technical certificates and want to move into degree programs; McKiff said TechConnect enrolled 350 students in 18 months, with 70 students either graduated or on track to graduate. She also described expansion in CDL and allied health programs and credited Millard County commissioners for funding CDL training for local residents.
McKiff said Snow asks the committee to consider applying performance funding toward public safety (largely to hire another police officer), student-success and retention tools, and continued investments in technical access programs. She also referenced a pilot with Salt Lake Community College on skills‑based general education and other collaborations intended to improve transfer and completion.
Committee members asked about Snow’s rural enrollment strategy and fundraising for athletics; McKiff and other presenters described community partnerships and digital-plus-high-touch outreach to increase local participation.
What’s next: Snow’s requests and performance funding proposals will be considered with other institutions’ requests as the subcommittee develops appropriations recommendations.
