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MINNESOTA STATE
LEGISLATIVE AGENDA

Students United has committed to advocating for policies at the state level that support students’ basic needs, college affordability, the rights of student loan borrowers, and investment in our Minnesota State System
 

2026 Priorities 

Prioritize Student Parents 
22% of American undergraduates are parents. However, gaps in data collection at MinnState universities and the Office of Higher Education limit students’ access to existing programs suchas priority registration.

 

Reduce Waste on Campus

30-40% of our food supply goes to waste. We need recovery programs on MinnState
campuses that efficiently deliver excess food to the most needy

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Simplify Transfer Pathways
Inconsistencies in the course catalogue are wasting our time and money. Reforms like common course numberings reduce barriers for students transferring within the MinnState
system.

 

Scale Direct Admissions Minnesota

Students need to know their postsecondary options. Every student in every high school in Minnesota deserves access to proactive college admissions.

Invest in Student Safety
Bonding is a safety issue. Leaky roofs and outdated infrastructure impact students’ learning, safety, and sense of belonging. We support requests for HEAPR funds and highlight bonding requests from Minnesota State-Mankato and Winona State as key to long-term postsecondary success.

Cap Tuition and Student Fee Hikes

Over half of our students’ chose their school primarily because of affordability. Any adjustments to tuition or fee structures must take student input into account. Double-digit tuition hikes are not a sustainable way to balance the budget.

2025 Priorities 

Invest in the Hunger-Free Campus Grant

Over a quarter of students across the seven Minnesota State Universities live with the daily burden of food insecurity. The Hunger Free Campus Grant is a necessary investment in students’ basic needs. The funds from the Hunger Free Campus Grant go directly to campus-wide efforts to ease student hunger through food pantry staffing, equipment upgrades, and food and supply purchasing. By supporting campus food pantries, we’re improving student grades, raising graduation rates, and bettering mental health outcomes for students.

 

Scale the Direct Admissions Minnesota program

Today, some 180 Minnesota high schools have opted into the Office of Higher Education’s Direct Admissions Minnesota program. Direct Admissions Minnesota notifies graduating Minnesota high school seniors that partner colleges and universities will admit them (upon application) based on their academic records and projected graduation date. With our coalition partners, we are looking to increase the scale of this life-changing program, which preliminary data shows can improve FAFSA completion and matriculation rates, especially among low-income Minnesotans.

 

Improve Naloxone access on campus

Amid an ongoing opioid crisis in the United States, colleges and universities remain a blind spot in the state’s harm reduction strategy. Overdose deaths rose nationally by 34% among young adults between 2018 and 2022. The ongoing mental health crisis remains a key contributor to opioid abuse.

Despite this, many public higher education institutions choose not to carry lifesaving naloxone (also referred to as Narcan) on campuses. We are calling for colleges and universities to stock naloxone in residential campus buildings and requesting that colleges and universities be added to the existing DHS Standing Order Portal to access naloxone.

 

Support Minnesota State’s Budget Request

We believe a robust student support system is the best way to ensure students graduate college. Mental health resources, basic needs investments, and open educational resources are key to creating an accessible, affordable, and attainable education. We are in full support of the Minnesota State Systems Office Budget Request.

2024 Priorities 

Enhancing Students' Access to SNAP Benefits

Too many students across our seven universities live with the daily burden of food insecurity and, as a result, suffer worse academic outcomes and struggle to complete their degrees. This crisis impacts over a quarter of students in Minnesota, and it’s time to act. Specifically, Students United calls on Minnesota’s lawmakers to clarify state law and allow more low-income, food-insecure students to access this federal benefit.

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Expanding Minnesota's Borrower Bill of Rights

With almost $30 billion in collectively held outstanding loan debt, the student debt crisis is a reality experienced by thousands of Minnesotans, especially the more than 85,000 Minnesotans in delinquency. Minnesota’s student loan borrowers owe an average of $37,492 for state college students. Students United asks lawmakers to expand the Student Borrower Bill of Rights, establish an individual right of action, and clarify Minnesota’s student loan ombudsperson’s market monitoring authority.

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Universal FAFSA Requirement

Fewer than half of Minnesota high school students complete the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid), putting Minnesota 40th in the country for FAFSA completion as of 2023. As a result, Minnesota’s graduating classes of 2021 and 2022 left nearly $100 million of federal student aid on the table. Under universal FAFSA, high schools would integrate FAFSA completion into their senior graduation and post-secondary planning process, requiring seniors to complete the FAFSA or an application for state financial aid before graduation unless they complete a “no questions asked” opt-out form or are issued a hardship waiver.

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Supporting Minnesota State's Bonding and Supplemental Budget Requests

These resources will ensure that Minnesota State can maintain safe and adequate campus buildings, which are crucial to the student experience, and continue to deliver high-quality academic programs.

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