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Regulations for Determining Residency for Tuition
Regulations for Tuition Charges
The
Office of the Admissions is responsible for determining, for tuition purposes,
the residence status of students enrolled at Nevada State College.
Each
student claiming legal residence in Nevada must submit an Application for
Resident Fees. Recent Nevada high school graduates, whose parents' permanent
address is listed as being in Nevada, are exempt from this procedure.
Information
and application forms are available upon request in the Office of the
Admissions.
The
following regulations are Board of Regents' policy for all institutions in the
Nevada System of Higher Education. These regulations are subject to change.
Changes become effective immediately upon Board of Regents adoption.
Title 4 - Codification of Board Policy
Statements
Chapter
15- Regulations for Determining Residency and Tuition Charges
Section 1. Purpose
These
regulations have been enacted to provide uniform rules throughout the
University and Community College System of Nevada (the "System"), and
all member institutions thereof, for the purpose of determining whether
students shall be classified as resident students or nonresident students for
tuition charges. (B/R 5/95)
Section 2. Definitions
For
the purposes of these regulations, the terms stated below shall have the
following meanings:
- "Alien"
means a person who is not a citizen of the United States of America.
- “Armed Forces of the
United States” means the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Marine Corps
and the Coast Guard, on active duty and does not include the National
Guard or other reserve force, with the exception of active members of the
Nevada National Guard. (B/R 3/04)
- "Clear and
convincing evidence" means evidence that is clear in the sense that
it is not ambiguous, equivocal or contradictory and convincing in the
sense that it is of such a credible, reliable, authentic and relevant
nature as to evoke confidence in the truth of it.
- "Continuously
enrolled" means enrollment within a normal academic year for which
continuous enrollment is claimed. A person need not attend summer sessions
or other between-semester sessions in order to be continuously enrolled.
- "Date of
matriculation" means the first day of instruction in the semester or
term in which enrollment of a student first occurs, except that at the
University of Nevada School of Medicine it means the date that a notice of
admittance is sent to a student, and at the community colleges it excludes
correspondence courses and community service courses that are not state
funded. A person who enrolled in an institution of the University and
Community College System of Nevada but withdrew enrollment during the 100%
refund period may, for the purposes of these regulations, be deemed not to
have matriculated and any determination concerning residency status shall
be voided until such time as the person again enrolls at a System
institution.
- "Dependent"
means a person who is not financially independent and is claimed as an
exemption for federal income tax purposes under Section 152 of the
Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 152) by another person for the most
recent tax year.
- "Family"
means the natural or legally adoptive parent or parents of a dependent
person, or if one parent has legal custody of a dependent person, that
parent.
- "Financially
independent" means a person who has not been and will not be claimed
as an exemption for federal income tax purposes under Section 152 of the
Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 152) by another person, except his or
her spouse, for the most recent tax year.
- “Most recent tax year”
means the income tax return submitted for the prior income year.
- "Legal
guardian" means a court-appointed guardian of a dependent person, who
was appointed guardian at least twelve (12) months immediately prior to
the dependent person's date of matriculation and for purposes other than
establishing the dependent person's residence.
- "Nonresident"
means a person who is not a resident.
- "Objective
evidence" means evidence that is verifiable by means other than a
person's own statements.
- “Relocated,” means
evidence of permanent, full-time employment or establishment of a business
in Nevada prior to the date of matriculation.
- "Residence"
a term which for the purposes of these regulations is synonymous with the
legal term "domicile," and means that location in which a person
is considered to have the most settled and permanent connection, intends
to remain and intends to return after any temporary absences. Residence
results from the union of a person's physical presence in the location
with objective evidence of an intent to remain at that location for other
than a temporary purpose.
- "Resident"
means a person who has established a bona fide residence in the State of
Nevada with the intent of making Nevada the person's true, fixed and
permanent home and place of habitation, having clearly abandoned any
former residence and having no intent to make any other location outside
of Nevada the person's home and habitation. The term also includes a
member of the Armed Forces of the United States who has previously
established a bona fide residence in the State of Nevada, but who has been
transferred to a military posting outside of Nevada while continuing to
maintain a bona fide residence in Nevada. When residence for a particular
period is required under these regulations, this shall mean that the
person claiming residence for the period must be physically present and
residing in Nevada during all of the period required, excluding temporary,
short-term absences for business or pleasure.
- “Returning student”
means a student who re-enrolls after a break in enrollment of one of more
semesters. A “returning student” retains prior resident status, if any, as
long as there is no indication that the student has established residency
elsewhere. (B/R 11/96)
- "Student"
means a person who is enrolled at an institution of the University and
Community College System of Nevada.
- "Tuition"
means a monetary charge assessed against nonresident students, which is in
addition to registration fees, or other fees assessed against all
students. (B/R 5/95) (B/R 8/04)
Section 3. Tuition
Tuition
shall not be charged to current enrollees or graduates of a Nevada high school.
Tuition
shall be charged to nonresident students, except that at the community colleges
no tuition shall be charged for registration in community service courses,
which are not state funded. (B/R 6/02)
Section 4. Resident Students
As supported by clear and convincing evidence, any person to
whom one of the following categories applies shall be deemed a resident student
for tuition purposes:
- Except
as provided otherwise in this section, a dependent person whose spouse,
family or legal guardian is a bona fide resident of the State of
Nevada at the date of matriculation. Some or all of the following pieces
of objective evidence of Nevada residency may be required with the student’s
application for enrollment:
- Evidence of Nevada as the spouse’s, parents’ or legal
guardian’s permanent, primary residence at the date of matriculation
(examples of evidence include home ownership, a lease agreement, rent
receipts, utility bills).
- The student’s birth certificate or proof of legal
guardianship.
- The spouse’s, parents’ or legal guardian’s tax return for
the most recent tax year, which indicates the student claimed as a
dependent.
- A Nevada driver’s license or Nevada identification card
for the spouse, parent or legal guardian issued prior to the date of
matriculation.
- A Nevada vehicle registration for the spouse, parent or
legal guardian issued prior to the date of matriculation.
- Nevada voter registration for the spouse, parent or legal
guardian issued prior to the date of matriculation.
- Evidence that the student’s spouse, family, or legal
guardian has relocated to Nevada for the primary purpose of permanent
full-time employment or to establish a business in Nevada (examples of
evidence include a letter from the employer or copy of business license).
- Except
as provided otherwise in this section, a financially independent person
whose family resides outside the State of Nevada, if the person himself or
herself is a bona fide resident of the State of Nevada for at least six
(6) months immediately prior to the date of matriculation. Some or all of
the following pieces of objective evidence of Nevada residency may be
required with the student’s application for enrollment:
- Evidence of six months physical, continuous presence in
the State of Nevada prior to the date of matriculation (examples of
evidence include a lease agreement, rent receipts, utility bills).
- The student’s tax return for the most recent tax year,
indicating a Nevada address. If no federal tax return has been filed by
the student because of minimal or no taxable income, documented
information concerning the receipt of such nontaxable income. If the
student is under the age of 24, a copy of the parent’s or legal
guardian’s tax return for the most recent tax year that indicates the
student was not claimed as a dependent.
- The student’s Nevada driver’s license or Nevada
identification card issued prior to the date of matriculation.
- The student’s Nevada vehicle registration issued prior to
the date of matriculation.
- The student’s Nevada voter registration issued prior to
the date of matriculation.
- Evidence that the student, and/or the person’s spouse,
has relocated to Nevada for the primary purpose of permanent full-time
employment or to establish a business in Nevada (examples of evidence
include a letter from the employer or copy of business license).
- A
former member of the Armed Forces of the United States who was relocated
from Nevada as a result of a permanent change of duty station pursuant to
military orders will be considered a Nevada resident for tuition purposes
under the following conditions:
- He/She was a resident of Nevada prior to leaving the
state as a member of the Armed Forces;
- He/She maintained his/her Nevada residency while a member
of the Armed Forces; and
- He/She returns to the State of Nevada within one year of
leaving the Armed Forces. It will be necessary for the student to supply
documentation in support of each of these conditions (e.g., driver’s
license, property ownership, evidence of absentee voting, etc.)
- Licensed
educational personnel employed full-time by a public school district in
the State of Nevada, or the spouse or dependent child of such an employee.
(B/R 11/96)
- A
teacher who is currently employed full-time by a private elementary,
secondary or postsecondary educational institution whose curricula meet
the requirements of NRS 394.130, or the spouse or dependent child of such
an employee. (B/R 11/96)
- An
alien who has become a Nevada resident by establishing bona fide residence
in Nevada and who holds a permanent immigrant visa, or has been granted
official asylum or refugee status, or has been issued a temporary resident
alien card, or holds an approved immigration petition as a result of
marriage to a U.S. citizen. An alien holding another type of visa shall
not be classified as a resident student, except as may be required by
federal law or court decisions and upon due consideration of evidence of
Nevada residence. (B/R 8/04)
APPLICATION
FOR RESIDENCY BASED ON PARENT’S STATE OF LEGAL RESIDENCY
- Acceptable reasons for
applicant residing outside the state and using parent's residency include:
attendance at an out of-state institution of higher learning, a year
abroad, extended travel, temporary employment in another state or country,
Peace Corps, military duty, etc.
- Applicants who are
applying for Nevada residency status based on their parents' state of
legal residency must document that:
- At least one parent
has lived in Nevada continuously for at least twelve (12) consecutive
months immediately prior to the date of the August 15 application
deadline for Fall Semester.
- At least one parent
must have claimed Nevada as their state of legal residence on their
Federal Income Tax return.
- The applicant must be
26 years of age or under at the time of the January 15 for Spring
Semester.
SECTION UPDATE:
Pursuant
to the passage of Senate Bill 32 (Chapter 374, Statutes of Nevada 2005), as of
July 1, 2005, a financially independent student must be a bona fide resident of
the State of Nevada for at least 12 months prior to matriculation to qualify
for in-state tuition. Further, for
a dependent student to qualify for in-state tuition, the student’s family must
reside in the state for at least 12 months prior to matriculation.
In
August 2004, the Board of Regents revised its residency policy to conform to
state law providing that a student must reside in the Nevada for only 6 months
in order to qualify for in‑state tuition. To accommodate students during the transition from the
6-month to 12‑month residency rule, each student who is a resident of the
State of Nevada for at least 6 months but less than 12 months before the
date of matriculation for Fall 2005 shall be deemed for tuition purposes a bona
fide resident.
Sections 5-7 are not applicable to NSC.
Section 8. Reclassification of Nonresident
Status
There
is a rebuttal presumption that a nonresident attending an institution of the
University and Community College System of Nevada is in the State of Nevada for
the primary or sole purpose of obtaining an education. Therefore, a nonresident
who enrolls in an institution of the System shall continue to be classified as
a nonresident student throughout the student's enrollment, unless and until the
student demonstrates that his or her previous residence has been abandoned and
that the student is a Nevada resident. Each student seeking reclassification
from nonresident to resident student status must satisfy the following four
conditions:
1.
Application
and Written Declaration
The student must apply in writing to the
appropriate Records Office of the institution for reclassification to resident
student status. The application must include a written declaration of intent to
relinquish residence in any other state and to certify to the establishment of
bona fide residence in Nevada. A declaration form prescribed by the Chancellor
and approved by the Board shall be utilized by each institution. The filing of
a false declaration will result in the payment of nonresident tuition for the period
of time the student was enrolled as a resident student and may also lead to
disciplinary sanctions under Chapter Six of the University and Community
College System of Nevada Code. Disciplinary sanctions include a warning,
reprimand, probation, suspension or expulsion.
(B/R 02/05)
2.
Bona
fide Residence in Nevada
The student, or the parents or legal guardian of the student, must document
continuous physical presence as a Nevada resident for at least twelve (12)
months immediately prior to the date of the application for reclassification.
No fewer than four (4) of the following pieces of objective evidence must be
submitted with the application for reclassification:
a.
Ownership
of a home in Nevada.
b.
Lease
of living quarters in Nevada.
c.
Mortgage
or rent receipts and utility receipts for the home or leased quarters.
d.
Nevada
driver’s license or Nevada identification card issued twelve (12) months prior
to the date of application.
e.
Nevada
vehicle registration issued twelve (12) months prior to the date of application.
f.
Nevada
voter registration issued twelve (12) months prior to the date of application.
g.
Financial
Independence
3.
The
student must provide evidence of financial independence. A dependent person
whose family or legal guardian is a nonresident is not eligible for
reclassification to resident student status. The following piece of objective
evidence must be submitted with the application for reclassification:
a.
A
true and correct copy of the student’s federal income tax return for the most
recent tax year showing a Nevada address. If no federal tax return has been
filed because of minimal or no taxable income, documented information
concerning the receipt of such nontaxable income must be submitted. If the
student is under the age of 24, a copy of the parent’s or legal guardian’s tax
return for the most recent tax year must be submitted that indicates the
student was not claimed as a dependent.
4.
Intent
to Remain in Nevada
The student must present clear and convincing,
objective evidence of intent to remain a Nevada resident. No fewer than three
(3) of the following pieces of objective evidence must be submitted with the
application for reclassification:
a.
Employment
in Nevada for twelve (12) months immediately prior to the date of the
application for reclassification;
b.
A
license for conducting a business in Nevada;
c.
Admission
to a licensed practicing profession in Nevada;
d.
Registration
or payment of taxes or fees on a home, vehicle, mobile home, travel trailer,
boat or any other item of personal property owned or used by the person for
which state registration or payment of a state tax or fee is required for the
twelve (12) month period immediately prior to the date of the application;
e.
A
Nevada address listed on selective service registration;
f.
Evidence
of active savings and checking accounts in Nevada financial institutions for at
least twelve (12) months immediately prior to the date of the application;
g.
Evidence
of summer term enrollment at a UCCSN institution;
h.
Voting
or registering to vote in Nevada; or
i.
Any
other evidence that objectively documents intent to abandon residence in any
other state and to establish a Nevada residence.
5.
The
presentation by a person of one or more items of evidence as indicia of
residence is not conclusive on the issue of residency. Determinations of
residence shall be made on a case-by-case basis and the evidence presented
shall be given the weight and sufficiency it deserves, after taking all
available evidence into consideration.
6.
Because
residence in a neighboring state other than Nevada is a continuing
qualification for enrollment in the Good Neighbor, Children of Alumni, or WICHE
Western Undergraduate Exchange Programs at a UCCSN institution, a student who
was initially enrolled in a System institution under any of these discounted
tuition programs shall not normally be reclassified as a resident student
following matriculation. A nonresident student who subsequently dis-enrolls
from the Good Neighbor, Children of Alumni, or WICHE Western Undergraduate
Exchange Programs and pays full nonresident tuition for at least twelve (12)
months may apply for reclassification to resident student status. An
application for reclassification may also be submitted under the provisions of
this section if the material facts of a student’s residency, or the parents’ or
legal guardian’s residency, have substantially changed following matriculation.
7.
When
a student has been reclassified to resident student status, the
reclassification shall become effective at the registration period in the
System institution immediately following the date the student receives notice
of the reclassification decision.
8.
No
reclassification under these regulations shall give rise to any claim for
refund of tuition already paid to the University and Community College System
of Nevada.
(B/R 8/04)
Section 9. Administration of the Regulations
Each
institution of the Nevada System of Higher Education shall designate an
appropriate office to implement and administer these regulations.
- Each designated office
shall make the initial decisions on the resident or nonresident student
status of persons enrolling in the institution.
- Each designated office
shall make the initial decisions on applications for reclassification from
nonresident to resident student status.
- The President of each
System institution shall establish an appellate procedure under which a
person may appeal decisions of the designated office concerning tuition or
status as a resident or nonresident student to an appellate board.
- A person may appeal a
decision of the designated office to the appellate board within thirty
(30) days from the date of the decision of the office. If an appeal is
not taken within that time, the decision of the designated office shall
be final.
- The appellate board
shall consider the evidence in accordance with the standards and criteria
of these regulations and shall make a decision that shall be final. No
further appeal beyond the appellate board shall be permitted.
- In exceptional cases,
where the application of these regulations works an injustice to an
individual who technically does not qualify as a resident student, but
whose status, either because of the residence of the student or his
family, is such as to fall within the general intent of these regulations,
then the appellate board shall have the authority to determine that such a
student be classified as a resident student. It is the intent of this
provision that it applies only in the infrequent, exceptional cases where
a strict application of these regulations results, in the sole judgment of
the appellate board, in an obvious injustice. (B/R 11/96, 8/04)
Section 10. Uniformity of Decisions
The decision of an institution of the University and Community
College System of Nevada to grant resident student or nonresident student status
to a person shall be honored at other System institutions, unless a person
obtained resident student status under false pretenses or the facts existing at
the time resident student status was granted have significantly changed.
Students granted nonresident student status by an institution retain the right
to apply for reclassification under the provisions of the chapter.
(B/R 8/04, 2/05)
TUITION CLASSIFICATION INFORMATION
Your
initial residency classification is determined from the information you supply
on your application for admission to the college. You may file a petition if
you wish to contest out-of-state classification status or if you feel that you
have subsequently become eligible for in-state status. Until a decision has
been made on your residency, you will be considered a non-resident. If your
petition is denied, you may appeal to the College
Residency
Appeals Board within thirty days. If you do not appeal within the thirty day
period, the decision of the Office of the Admissions is final. If you do file
an appeal with the College Residency Appeals Board, the decision of that board
is final. There is no further appeal beyond this board. The fact that you do
not qualify for in-state status in any other state does not guarantee in-state
status in Nevada, because residency status is governed by Board of Regents
policy. Residency classification for tuition purposes clearly places the burden
of proof upon you to provide clear and convincing evidence of eligibility.
Information
submitted to qualify for in-state classification is subject to independent
verification. Individuals submitting false information or falsified supporting
documents are subject to both criminal charges and college disciplinary
procedures.
APPEALING A RESIDENCY DECISION
A
student may appeal the decision for residency classification made by the Office
of Admissions. This appeal must be filed with the Residency Appeals Board
within thirty days of the decision of the Office of the Admissions. If the
appeal is not filed within this time frame, the decision of the Office of
Admissions becomes final.
Please
contact the Office of the Admissions for instructions regarding the appeals
process. Decisions of the Appeals Board are final. There is no further
reconsideration beyond this board.
REGULATIONS
FOR REDUCED NON-RESIDENT TUITION
On
February 23, 1990, the UCCSN Board of Regents approved the following policy to
be effective beginning with the 1990 fall semester:
GOOD NEIGHBOR NON-RESIDENT TUITION POLICY
A
graduate of a high school or community college in a California county,
bordering on Nevada, may be charged reduced nonresident tuition when enrolling
at UCCSN institutions. Furthermore, an individual who resides in a qualifying
county, and who has maintained a legal, bona fide, resident status for a period
of at least 12 consecutive months prior to the first day of the semester in
which enrollment is sought, may also be charged reduced nonresident tuition.
The
policy is effective for each qualified student who is approved for admission
and enrollment effective for the next semester. Students approved under this
policy are ineligible for any claim for refund of nonresident tuition already
paid to the Nevada State College.
The
list of approved Good Neighbor counties includes: California: Alpine, El
Dorado, Inyo, Lassen, Modoc, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, San Bernardino and
Sierra counties.
Application
forms are available upon request from the Office of the Admissions.
WESTERN UNDERGRADUATE EXCHANGE (WUE)
Students
who claim residence in a state that participates in the Western Undergraduate
Exchange may be eligible to attend the college at reduced tuition cost. For
further information, contact the Western Interstate Commission for Higher
Education (WICHE) office in your state. In Nevada, contact the WICHE office at
(775)754-4900.
Fees
Paying Your Fees
Fees
may be paid online: go to http://www.nsc.nevada.edu Click Current Students, click Student Account Information.
Or, you may pay your fees at any Community College of Southern Nevada Bursar’s
Office.
Nevada National Guard Fee Waiver
Title 4, Chapter 17, Section 13.4
Pursuant
to the passage of Senate Bill 78 (Chapter 181, Statutes of Nevada 2005), as of
July 1, 2005, the pilot fee waiver program for active members of the Nevada National
Guard is now a permanent program.
As specified in Board policy, eligibility criteria for the program are
as follows:
Any
member of the active Nevada National Guard, including a Nevada National Guard
recruit, may be permitted to register for credit without a registration fee or,
except as otherwise provided, laboratory fee(s).
- This policy is
applicable during Fall and Spring terms only.
- Independent study and
correspondence courses are not eligible for waiver under this policy.
- Laboratory fees associated with all courses numbered below
the 300 level are eligible for waiver under this policy. Exceptions to the waiver of
laboratory fees includes:
1) per semester fees, such as the Health Service fee; 2)
special course fees for purposes other than class supplies – including
individual instruction, third-party charges, and special transportation
requirements; 3) fees for actual class cost in excess of $100; and 4)
technology fees.
- A person to whom the fee waiver is awarded shall be deemed
a bona fide resident of Nevada for tuition purposes.
- To be eligible for the fee waiver, the person must be a
member in good standing or a recruit of the active Nevada National Guard
at the beginning of and throughout the entire semester for which the
waiver is granted.
- The member or recruit of the Nevada National Guard must
achieve at least a minimum 2.00 semester grade point average in order to
maintain subsequent eligibility for the fee waiver.
- The institution may
request the Adjutant General to verify the membership in the active Nevada
National Guard of a person who is seeking or has been granted the fee
waiver.
- If a fee waiver is
granted to a Nevada National Guard recruit and the recruit does not enter
full-time National Guard duty within one (1) year after enlisting, the
student shall reimburse the Board of Regents for all previously waived
registration fees and laboratory fees if the failure to enter full-time
National Guard duty is attributable to the recruit’s own conduct.
- If a fee waiver is
granted to a member of the Nevada National Guard and the member does not
achieve at least a minimum 2.00 semester grade point average and remain a
member in good standing with the Guard, the student shall reimburse the
Board of Regents for the semester’s waived registration fees and
laboratory fees and will not be allowed to register for additional courses
until the debt is paid in full.
- Registration fees
associated with the William S. Boyd School of Law, the University of
Nevada School of Medicine, and the UNLV School of Dental Medicine are not
eligible for waiver under this policy.