| Address
to the New York State Financial Aid Administrators Association
By
Cathleen Bellomo, Director of Financial Aid at Wells College and NYSFAAA
president
Many of you look at me and see the
third woman president of NYSFAAA. But as I look around the room, I know
that another 10 years will not pass before another woman stands before
you. What is more amazing to me is that I am only the third director of
financial aid Wells College has ever had.
The first and second directors, I am
pleased to say, are here with me tonight: Rusty Hopkins and Barbara Post.
For those of you who do not know, Rusty was a charter member of NYSFAAA.
I remember asking her about that initial meeting on November 14, 1968 in,
ironically, Syracuse, New York. I could only envision the energy among
those 97 financial aid professionals who represented all parts of the state
and all types of institutions as they adopted a constitution and elected
officers.
Because of Rusty and Barb and their
involvement in NYSFAAA, I did not learn the skills of my profession in
the vacuum of my institution. I learned the love for financial aid and
its purpose through the eyes of every member of NYSFAAA who attended the
Novice Training Workshop at Wells College. My contact with colleagues from
across the state, upstate and downstate, private, public or proprietary,
enabled me to see beyond the challenges of one small, private institution
for women. Instead, I learned to appreciate and understand the myriad conflicts
and issues facing all types of institutions in New York State. Yes, I have
been very lucky that Wells College and NYSFAAA have had a link over time
and that my institution has allowed me to become an active member of a
professional organization whose main mission is to help educate our youth
to insure our future.
Rusty and Barb, you would be amazed
at the changes the 90s have brought. It has truly been the "age of delivery."
Students do not need to wait eight to 10 weeks to receive their student
loan funds. And the days of filling in those white bubbles on Pell Payment
Documents with your #2 pencils are over. We have streamlined our systems
and made application and disbursement of financial aid easier and quicker.
But I believe that with all change, something is sacrificed.
The days of all of us attending the
College Board meetings to discuss changes with the Financial Aid Form do
not occur any longer. We no longer talk about needs analysis but instead
talk about computer systems. We no longer talk about "ability to pay."
Instead we talk about "willingness to pay." We no longer talk about "access
and choice." We now talk solely of "access." We no longer talk about "family
contribution." We speak about "eligibility index." Merit scholarships are
not awarded to those most needy of students who achieved academic success.
They are used to buy the best and the brightest for our institutions. And
if you listen to our executive council representatives talk about attendance
at regional meetings, it appears that often we are no longer even talking
to each other.
We did not cause these changes. We
were swept up in the problems facing our institutions in the 90s. The decrease
in the number of college-age students made the competition for enrollment
goals our main priority on most campuses. The lack of increased federal
and state financial aid funds resulted in our institutions developing more
complex ways of packaging. Our computer systems changed before we could
master the one being sent out of our office. And many of us suffered decreases
in staff that made volunteering in NYSFAAA harder than ever before.
I see light in this new decade. Researchers
tell us there will be an increase in traditional-age college students.
Higher education enrollment is projected to increase by 12% from 1996 to
2008. We have experienced the largest T.A.P. increase in years. Our delivery
systems still have their problems, but we are more comfortable with solving
them than ever before. So where does this leave us? It does not mean we
will go back to the "old ways." But we will need to find new ways of working
in this visual, fast-paced, technological world.
NYSFAAA will survive the 21st century,
and I believe it will renew itself with the same energy and passion that
our colleagues experienced in 1968 when they founded our organization.
How will we do it? What does the future hold? Here is my "Lettermen's top
10" for NYSFAAA in the next decade:
10. Enrollment management is here to
say. Whether you report to an enrollment manager or are part of a team
on your campus, all of us will agree that the data gathering and assessment
we have done in the past few years will be in even more demand. Computers
and mainframe systems have enabled us to gather more data and to target
those students who would best fit our institutions. This is better than
"sex" to most admission directors. If we are to be seen as major players
on our campuses, we will need these skills.
9. Financial aid professionals from
non-traditional schools have been members of NYSFAAA for years. These schools
serve a purpose in our society and cannot be forgotten. They have unique
issues and concerns, and we as an organization need to hear our colleagues
and be there for them. I am pleased to say this year Evelyn Destio, chairperson
of the Statewide Non-traditional Concerns Committee, conducted a training
session downstate, and I hope to see more of these workshops in the future.
8. Our knowledge of tax credits, education
IRAs, college savings plans, outside scholarship sources, and alternative
loans will need to be stronger. If anyone read the emails this past week
on NYSFAAA-L concerning alternative loans, you know this to be true. We
cannot sit back and let the federal and state governments alone determine
how tax credits and college savings plans will effect a student's financial
aid eligibility. And even more important, we need to remind our lawmakers
that many of these programs do not assist our neediest populations. I have
a friend who is a stockbroker at E.G. Edwards. She is always asking me
about educational IRAs and college savings plans. Now she is trying to
find loopholes in the system that will save her clients money. They give
seminars on these plans. One day I said to her, "You know these programs
do not help our low-income students." Her response to me was: "Cathy, you
are in the only business today whose sole purpose is to help the neediest
of students." If this is true, we have a responsibility today and tomorrow
to speak out for the rights of these students.
7. We will not be able to decrease
our pressure for increased funding at the federal and state level. Since
there will be an increase in college-bound students, the need for financial
aid funds will grow as well. Tom and Bill did a wonderful job in educating
our lawmakers in Albany, and I want to believe they had a strong impact
on the increase in T.A.P. funds we had this year. We will need to make
sure these funds exist for our next entering class as well. During the
past few years, we have relied on other colleagues and NASFAA to respond
to NPRMS and to send letters to our lawmakers in Albany and Washington.
Well, those colleagues you believed would respond have been relying on
you to respond. We have become politically negligent as a profession. We
have used the excuse that our voice does not mean as much as parents or
students. You are probably correct in that statement, and we need to find
ways to educate our students and parents about the political process. However,
if they are not writing and we are not writing, then no one is writing.
I do not believe that is to our advantage. And I strongly believe that
one of the major roles of your executive council representatives is to
assist the Government Relations Committee. This year we will be having
our February meeting in Albany. With the assistance of Cindy Kohlman and
Beth Post and their Government Relations Committee, we will be meeting
with lawmakers at that time.
6. The "rising cost of higher education"
will remain an issue, as my good friend Irv Bodosky just reminded me. Tuition
increases will always generate an uproar among students, parents, and lawmakers.
We can only guess what college will cost 10 years from now. We can only
imagine what our students' total debt will be upon graduation. I believe
amidst this argument, colleges will come under scrutiny concerning academic
progress requirements, retention rates, and graduation rates. I fear that
increased funding might come with a price tag to students in terms of their
academic progress requirements. We could find ourselves having to compile
data we have not been responsible for in the past - one more thing to add
to our already overfilled plates.
5. Students and parents will demand
services. And they want answers to be quick, easy, and visual. I am going
to share with you a story about a "blooper" that I made this past spring.
I am very old-school, so it has taken me a little longer to embrace the
new technology. But I finally decided to allow my students the option of
entrance loan counseling online. I was so proud of myself as I devised
the written instructions to students. We waited in anticipation for the
confirmations to come rolling in through our email. We waited. They did
not arrive. I was stunned! Where did I fail? So in our opening meeting
with new students I asked, "How many of you read the materials concerning
online entrance loan counseling?" Very few raised their hands. I then asked,
"How many of you had access to the Internet in June?" Nearly everyone raised
their hands. Finally, one woman in the back of the room said, "My parents
take all the forms that have to do with financial aid. I don't see them."
How stupid of me! In my excitement to initiate change, I forgot two vital
rules: parents are choosing our lenders for our traditional-age students,
and they do not read either! As an organization, we produce a large body
of written materials to educate parents, students, and lawmakers. In this
next decade, we are going to have to ask ourselves, "How useful are these
materials in today's world?" Our homepage will become more and more important
in the years to come. We most likely will need more Vinces to accomplish
our goals.
4. We will always provide training.
Training is the cornerstone of our organization. We do it better than any
organization I know. And as it gets harder and harder for us to find time
away from our offices, we will need to examine how and what vehicle of
communication will be used in the future to accomplish state-wide training.
Will NYSFAAA develop, as EASFAA and NASFAA has, a group of trainers that
travel around the state to bring training to your back door? Will we see
more teleconferences? I do believe that as financial aid laws move beyond
our offices and into other areas of our campuses, we will be providing
training not to only our own colleagues but to admissions personnel, business
officers, registrars, and academic deans in the next decade. I hope that
in your regional meetings this fall you talk about the training you will
want to have this year and give any suggestions to Mike Pede. As officers
we are here to serve you, but please let us know how we can best serve
you.
3. NYSFAAA will not be able to function
in a vacuum in the decades ahead. We will need to work with existing organizations
to accomplish our goals. There are 2,700 national, regional, and state
educational organizations in our country. Partnerships will be made with
some of these to better meet the needs of our organization. The pooling
of resources, not just funds but people, will be the wave of the future.
Can SUNYFAP and NYSFAAA provide joint training sessions? We are all in
the business of financial aid. Our existing statewide committees will need
to examine their membership. Is it time to make the president of the NYS
Guidance Counselors Association a standing member of our statewide Guidance
Counselor Workshop Committee? And what about CAAN? Is it time we ask some
of our scholarship winners to serve on our state-wide committees to learn
from students themselves on how to best educate them about the changes
in the financial aid process? I believe it is. And our opportunities in
this area are endless, not just for training and outreach, but for advocacy
as well. Becoming active in the state with our educational community is
the best public relations we have for our organization. We should remember
the old saying, "United we stand, divided we fall."
2. We live in a multicultural world.
Studies predict that the growth in college age students will come mainly
from our minority populations. Is this a group NYSFAAA is reaching already?
If not, how do we reach this population? I do not believe our colleges
are ready to target this population. And I do not believe we are either.
That is why I have formed a new committee and have asked Tony Thompson
and Sherwood Johnson to chair the statewide Diversity and Outreach Committee.
They will be reviewing different ways that NYSFAAA can reach out to those
students from schools that do not receive your traditional financial aid
nights. They will also be seeking to build partnerships with those already
existing organizations whose purpose is to provide outreach activities
to these students. Early awareness of college financial aid opportunities
is crucial to this population's success, and we must do all we can to assure
that information reaches these students.
1. The heart of NYSFAAA has always
been its regions. As mentioned earlier, there is a growing concern about
the attendance at regional meetings, not only from the financial aid community,
but from our lender community as well. I have even been told that NYSFAAA
is being viewed as a "social organization." How can an organization that
trained 1,208 guidance counselors and conducted a record 572 financial
aid information sessions in 1999 be called a social organization? These
workshops and our own state-wide training efforts are not being done by
executive council people only, or even by the members that do attend regional
meetings, but by most of the people in this room. Volunteers are found
not just at regional meetings but through phone calls and emails through
friends. However, it was through regional meetings that the executive council
was informed of its members' wishes and concerns for the year. Without
strong regional participation, decisions for the organization are being
made by a few and not by the majority. Mentoring activities are strongest
at the regional level. How can these activities occur while attendance
is low? Executive Council will be asking all regional chairpersons to attend
our December meeting. We would like to discuss this issue and determine
if there is anyway that we can assist our regions with increasing their
attendance and volunteerism. In the statewide budget, there is funding
set aside for regional training and last year not all these funds were
used. The strength of our organization lies with its regions. We cannot
falter here if we are to be successful in meeting the challenges confronting
us in the next decade.
I will leave you with a quote from
the movie "Saving Private Ryan." For those of you who did not see the movie,
Tom Hanks and a few soldiers are forced to travel across a war-torn Europe
in search of Private Ryan. All they really want to do is to go home, understandably.
A few die on the way. Some get injured. In simple words, it was not as
an easy task. But they did the right thing: they found Private Ryan. And
Tom Hank's last words to Private Ryan were, "Earn it." Two simple words:
"Earn It." Everything NYSFAAA has been, is, and will be is the result of
hard work and the dedication of its members. Thank you.
Delivered in Syracuse, New York,
October 2000
Last updated 1/23/2002
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