Undergraduate tuition will rise to $13,058 for Minnesota residents at the University of Minnesota's Twin Cities campus this fall.
The new rate, an increase of $258, or 2 percent, was approved Friday by a divided Board of Regents. Four of the 12 members voted against the increase.
"The cost of tuition has been a major concern of mine," said Randy Simonson, one of the dissenters, who joined the board in May.
Others defended the increase as smaller than the rate of inflation.
"We're talking about a $5 per week increase, offset by scholarships and other aid," said Regent Dean Johnson. "I wish we didn't have to raise tuition at the university, but I think it's a good investment."
The plan approved Friday includes a freeze on undergraduate tuition at three campuses, in Crookston, Duluth and Rochester, and a 1 percent increase at the Morris campus. U officials say they have slowed down the rate of tuition increases dramatically in recent years after college costs soared.
But in the face of growing resistance to tuition hikes, the board voted Friday to impose extra scrutiny on hiring decisions in an effort to control costs. The plan would require approval of the provost and a senior vice president before filling vacancies in jobs funded entirely by tuition or state tax dollars — about a third of the university's permanent, full-time positions, officials say.
Regent Steven Sviggum, who proposed the change, said he wanted a way to ensure that new hires in those categories are justified.