PASSHE committed to covering remaining tuition for low-income students, adding another affordability lever for Pennsylvania’s public higher education system. The initiative targets costs that can remain after other state and federal aid mechanisms, aiming to reduce net-price barriers for students most at risk of dropping out. While details beyond the announcement were not included in the provided excerpt, the policy is positioned as a system-level promise to fill tuition gaps rather than merely adjusting eligibility rules. For institutions and student services teams, tuition-completion guarantees can change advising priorities—shift from “aid navigation” to “enrollment completion,” with more predictable pricing for eligible students. The move arrives amid ongoing deficit pressures and tightening accountability rules, making net-price stabilization a key component of student retention and persistence planning.