SF4762

Lowest recognized family responsibility amount for purposes of determining state grant awards modification
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

Related bill: HF4266

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

  • Modify how the state determines financial aid for students by changing the lowest recognized family responsibility amount used to calculate state grant awards.
  • Update how assigned family responsibility is calculated for different student types and enrollment situations.
  • Allow adjustments to grant funding rules if there are surplus funds in a given biennium, and require adjustments to be limited to the current year without carrying forward.

Key terminology and definitions (as used in the bill)

  • Assigned family responsibility: the portion of a family’s contribution to a student’s cost of attendance used to determine state grant aid.
  • Parental contribution: the share of a dependent student’s cost of attendance contributed by the student’s parent(s), as determined by a federal needs analysis.
  • Student contribution: the share of a student’s own resources (or the student’s family in certain cases), as determined by a federal needs analysis.
  • Federal need analysis: the method used to calculate expected contribution from family and student toward the cost of attendance.
  • Living and miscellaneous expense allowance: a budget component used in calculating grant awards.
  • Dependent student: a student who is financially dependent on a parent(s).
  • Independent student with dependents other than a spouse: a student who is independent and has children or other dependents (not including a spouse) dependent on them.
  • Independent student without dependents other than a spouse: a student who is independent and does not have dependents other than a spouse.
  • Negative parental contribution / negative student contribution: scenarios where the calculated contribution is a negative amount.
  • Prorate: adjust the assigned family responsibility proportionally for part-time enrollment.
  • Surplus appropriation: extra available funds beyond projected grant demand that can trigger adjustments to expenses or contributions.

Main provisions

  • Assigned family responsibility calculations (Section 136A.101, subdivision 5a):

    • Dependent students: assigned family responsibility is 95% of the parental contribution.
    • If the parental contribution is between 0 and -1500: assigned family responsibility is 50% of the parental contribution.
    • If the parental contribution is less than -1500: recognized parental contribution is -1500.
    • Independent students with dependents other than a spouse: assigned family responsibility is 71% of the student contribution.
    • Independent students without dependents other than a spouse: assigned family responsibility is 35% of the student contribution.
    • If the student contribution is between 0 and -1500: assigned family responsibility is 50% of the student contribution.
    • If the student contribution is less than -1500: recognized student contribution is -1500.
    • If the student or parental contribution is less than 0, assigned family responsibility is 0.
    • For students enrolled less than full-time: assigned family responsibility is prorated based on the ratio of enrolled credits to full-time credits.
  • Surplus appropriation and adjustments to assigned family responsibility (Section 136A.121, subdivision 7a):

    • If the office determines there is more than enough funds to cover projected grant demand in the second year of the biennium, it may:
    • (1) increase the living and miscellaneous expense allowance in the second year, up to an amount that still leaves enough funds to cover projected grant demand; or
    • (2) adjust how negative contributions are treated by recognizing a negative parental contribution or a negative student contribution less than -1500 as equal to the lowest student contribution under the federal needs analysis.
    • These adjustments can be made one or more times.
    • When there are more than enough funds, the office must balance the need to fund grant demand with the goal of fully allocating the state’s grant appropriation.
    • Any increase in the living and miscellaneous expense allowance or the adjusted assigned family responsibility applies only in the current biennium and does not carry forward to the next one.
  • Administrative note: Section 3 is included but not described in the provided text.

Significant changes to existing law

  • Returns to defined rules for assigned family responsibility by explicitly setting percentages for dependent and independent students and establishing special handling for negative contributions, including a floor of -1500 for negative contributions.
  • Adds a formal mechanism to use surplus funds to temporarily increase the living and miscellaneous expense allowance or to adjust negative contributions to the lowest federal-needs-based figure, with limits so these changes do not carry into the next biennium.
  • Introduces prorating for part-time students within the assigned family responsibility calculation.

Practical impact and who is affected

  • Students and families will see changes in how much of their costs the state grant program expects them to contribute, and how grants are awarded based on those contributions.
  • Part-time students will have a prorated assigned family responsibility, potentially affecting their eligibility or grant size.
  • In years with extra funds, the state may temporarily boost living expenses for grant recipients or adjust the calculation to recognize a larger negative contribution floor, increasing grant awards in the short term.

Implementation considerations

  • Requires accuracy in applying federal need analysis results to determine parental and student contributions.
  • Requires administrative processes to monitor fund sufficiency and to implement one or more adjustments within a biennium.
  • Ensures that any adjustments funded by surplus do not carry over into subsequent years.

Sec. 3 note

  • The content of Section 3 is not provided in the excerpt.

Relevant Terms - Assigned family responsibility - Parental contribution - Student contribution - Federal need analysis - Cost of attendance - Living and miscellaneous expense allowance - Dependent student - Independent student with dependents other than a spouse - Independent student without dependents other than a spouse - Negative parental contribution - Negative student contribution - Prorate - Surplus appropriation - Full-time enrollment - Part-time enrollment

Bill text versions

Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
March 25, 2026SenateActionIntroduction and first reading
March 25, 2026SenateActionReferred toHigher Education

Citations

 
[
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [
        "New definition of assigned family responsibility as a percentage of contributions under the federal needs analysis.",
        "Dependent students: assigned family responsibility set at 95 percent of the parental contribution.",
        "Independent students with dependents other than a spouse: assigned family responsibility set at 71 percent of the student contribution.",
        "Independent students without dependents other than a spouse: assigned family responsibility set at 35 percent of the student contribution.",
        "Proration of assigned family responsibility for students enrolled part-time based on the ratio of enrolled credits to full-time credits."
      ],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "This bill modifies the assigned family responsibility used to determine state grant awards, setting specific percentages for dependent and independent students and introducing prorated calculations for part-time enrollment.",
      "modified": [
        "Replaces prior approach with a detailed percentage-based framework and fractional adjustments tied to enrollment status."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "136A.101",
    "subdivision": "5a"
  },
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [
        "If funds are more than sufficient to fund projected grant demand in the second year, the office may increase the living and miscellaneous expense allowance by up to an amount that preserves sufficient resources.",
        "When calculating assigned family responsibility, recognize a negative parental contribution or student contribution less than -1500 by adjusting to the lowest student contribution under the federal needs analysis.",
        "Adjustments may be made one or more times."
      ],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "This bill modifies surplus appropriation provisions for state grants, permitting adjustments to the living and miscellaneous expense allowance and to negative contribution calculations when funds are more than sufficient, with the ability to perform adjustments multiple times and with no carry-forward to the next biennium.",
      "modified": [
        "Adds a balancing approach between sufficient resources and projected grant demand to fully allocate the appropriations."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "136A.121",
    "subdivision": "7a"
  }
]

Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee
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