Dear UNT students,
We know you have a choice when choosing where to attend college, and UNT is committed to providing you a Tier One education at an affordable price. As announced today during my State of the University Part II address, UNT will not raise tuition for the third consecutive year. We also have reallocated scholarship awards to give more students, especially first-generation students and those with more need, the opportunity to stay in school. These two items are among the many strategic decisions we are making this year to make a UNT education more affordable and help limit student debt.
I also unveiled six Affordability Initiatives that will enable us to act as a social mobility elevator for our students and better serve our UNT family, both students and employees. For additional context about each initiative, watch my 15-minute SOTU address or read the transcript.
- Integrated Student Financial Support Center - We will create an "easy button" Integrated Student Financial Support Center by overhauling processes to provide students with seamless interactions between Student Financial Aid and Scholarships, Student Financial Services, and the Student Money Management Center.
- Affordable Learning Materials - We are calling on all departments and faculty to review their syllabi and replace costly textbooks and materials with Open Educational Resources and low-cost options whenever possible.
- Food and Housing Insecurity - We saw how COVID-19 exacerbated food and housing insecurity for many students, and we plan to expand housing and dining award programs, clarify the housing waiver process for FTIC commuters, establish a short-term emergency housing program, partner with apartment operators to provide intermediate-term housing, provide campus locker access and nap locations, and establish dining donation programs for peer-to-peer assistance.
- On-Campus Student Employment - We will conduct a comprehensive analysis of on-campus student wages and hiring processes to identify opportunities to make campus jobs more meaningful to student career progression, improve the process of finding a good match between student skills and departmental needs, make it easier for departments to hire qualified work-study students, and to improve the quality of the experience for our student employees. We also will assess the impact of increasing student wages.
- Staff Minimum Pay - To ensure all full-time staff are paid a living wage, we will increase the minimum wage to $12/hour on March 1 for full-time staff who have worked at UNT for 90 days or more. This is nearly a 30% increase in pay from our current minimum wage for some of our hardest working staff. We'll further analyze compensation of our employees over the next year to develop a plan that continues to support our lowest paid staff members.
- SmartDollar - In addition to our financial commitment to students, we are committed to helping full-time employees achieve financial well-being. Financial management tools and budget coaching through SmartDollar will become available to faculty and staff this summer.
This plan hits a number of our major strategic objectives in significant and measurable ways. It should improve retention, engage our students like you more deeply, limit or lower your debt, graduate students faster, improve our student-facing processes, and support the financial well-being of students, faculty, and staff members.
We remain defined by our values of caring, resilience, and creativity as we help students like you persist toward your dream of earning a UNT degree.
UNT Proud,
Neal Smatresk
UNT President