Fair
74°
DeKalb, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Vets face confusion using GI Bill at state schools

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

He was looking at an extra $20,000 a year out of pocket.

"It was a huge jump," says Lee, whose military occupational specialty, or MOS, was human intelligence collector. "And that's when I had to start thinking really hard about whether or not I was going to be able to afford school, or whether I'd have to take a year off and work while I tried to get in-state status."

Around that time, the university opted into the Yellow Ribbon Program, a provision of the GI Bill under which the school and the VA agree to split the difference between the resident and nonresident rate. There was only a limited amount set aside for the program, and students have to reapply each year, but Lee lucked out.

"This uncertainty almost took me out of school," he says. "California's not home for me anymore. At the same time, I didn't have any choice of living in Kentucky or Tennessee. That's where the Army told me I was going. You're kind of in this limbo where you don't know where your state residency lies."

He graduated in May with a bachelor's in political science.

Hayleigh Perez's case is a prime example of how convoluted these situations can become.

Perez, 26, enlisted in 2005 and was stationed at North Carolina's Fort Bragg, where she trained as a radiology technologist. She later did a 15-month deployment to Camp Bucca, Iraq.

While serving, the Iowa native met and married Sgt. 1st Class Jose Perez-Rodriguez, a medic, and the couple bought a home in Raeford, near the North Carolina base. Perez's next assignment took her to Texas, where she mustered out in 2009.

When Perez learned in late 2011 that her husband's orders would bring the family back to North Carolina, where they had continued paying property taxes, she began applying to schools. She was accepted at both Fayetteville State University and UNC-Pembroke.

But while FSU granted her resident status, Pembroke – which had the courses she most required – classified her as an out-of-state student. The difference in her out-of-pocket costs: $4,603.50 per semester.

When Perez's appeal to UNC was denied, she and Thigpen's group sued.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Reader Poll

How concerned are you about contracting the West Nile Virus?

A lot
A little
Not at all