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US postal workers help out with the nation's largest one-day food drive. A union coalition in California advocates for worker rights amidst climate challenges. Livestock waste is polluting 'Pure Michigan' state image. And Virginia farm workers receive updated heat protection guidelines.

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Republicans seek to prevent nearly nonexistent illegal noncitizens voting, Speaker Johnson survives a motion to remove him, and a Georgia appeals court will reconsider if Fulton County DA Willis is to be bumped from a Trump case.

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Some small towns in North Dakota worry they'll go to pot if marijuana is legalized, school vouchers are becoming a litmus test for Republicans, and Bennington, Vermont implements an innovative substance abuse recovery program.

Tuition-Free College? New Plan Gains Traction

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013   

PHOENIX - Tuition and fees at Arizona's public universities have risen as much as 96 percent since 2007. Today, a new idea for funding college without student loans is gaining national attention. "Pay It Forward, Pay It Back" works much like Social Security - in reverse. People go to school tuition-free, then pay a fraction of their income into a fund to make it possible for other students to also attend, tuition-free, in future.

It was proposed last fall by the Economic Opportunity Institute in Seattle. Since then, executive director John Burbank has been asked to present it to groups nationwide concerned about the mountains of student debt.

"It's a psychological as well as a financial barrier, and this pretty much demolishes those barriers and opens up higher education for all qualified Americans," he said. "That's pretty exciting, and we are really excited that this has gained such interest."

According to Burbank, the toughest challenge is coming up with the seed money for the first generation of "Pay It Forward" students - after that, the plan becomes self-financing. Oregon lawmakers at this year's session ran with the idea, passing the first bill to create a pilot program.

The Oregon Working Families Party helped keep the momentum going for that state's legislation. Campaign manager Sami Alloy said she kept an image in her mind that she saw on the Internet.

"It was a graffiti that somebody had written that said, 'What if the cure for cancer lies inside the brain of someone who can't afford college?' And I think about that all the time," she said. "Young people are doing worse than their parents did, because of the enormous burden of student debt and the unaffordability of higher education."

Alloy said she believes college tuition hikes and the recent failure of Congress to stop the doubling of interest rates on student loans will mean other states soon will consider "Pay It Forward" college funding.



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