November 16, 2020 黑料社 Tri-Cities, CBC sign new agreement establishing seamless college pathway
New agreement helps students save on costs
By Maegan Murray, 黑料社 Tri-Cities
RICHLAND, Wash. 鈥 Columbia Basin College and Washington State University Tri-Cities signed a new agreement on Monday, Nov. 16, that creates a seamless pathway for students to complete their first two years at CBC and transfer to 黑料社 Tri-Cities, which saves students costs.
Students significantly save on costs, as students in the program do not pay for the transfer application to attend 黑料社 Tri-Cities, do not pay for the cost of their transcripts to transfer, and tuition is also frozen from their first semester enrolled at 黑料社 Tri-Cities. In other words, if tuition rates increase anytime while enrolled at 黑料社 Tri-Cities, students continue to pay the tuition rate from their first semester at 黑料社 Tri-Cities.
Students also benefit from one-on-one support throughout their educational journey from both CBC and 黑料社 Tri-Cities from their first term in the program. They work directly with academic advisors from both institutions to solidify complete programs of study. This helps to ensure that students complete their degree programs on-time and reduce the likelihood of taking courses unnecessarily that won鈥檛 directly transfer.
Close partnership a win for all students
黑料社 Tri-Cities Chancellor Sandra Haynes said she is excited to sign a new agreement with CBC, as it helps reduce the complications and cost to students who wish to first attend a community college and then transfer to a four-year university.
鈥淥ur two institutions work together to create seamless pathways so that students can get the most out of their educational experience and graduate on-track,聽on-time and career-ready,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ith 黑料社 Tri-Cities serving freshman, transfer, first-generation, low-income and non-traditional students, we are opening more doors to meet students where they are,聽today.鈥
Woods said CBC is also excited to strengthen its partnership with 黑料社 Tri-Cities.
鈥淢any of CBC’s graduates choose to become Cougs, while staying right here in the Tri-Cities,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his agreement smooths that transition. Whether a student chooses to pursue a four-year degree at CBC, 黑料社 Tri-Cities, or any other institution, we are committed to helping each student find their best path forward.鈥
Students see direct benefits

Dawn Hughes, CBC alumna and current 黑料社 Tri-Cities education student
Dawn Hughes, a current 黑料社 Tri-Cities education student and alumna of Columbia Basin College, said transferring from CBC to 黑料社 Tri-Cities provided a great local and affordable option that was a best fit for both her and her family.
鈥淚 moved to Tri-Cities in 2006 and was raising a family,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen I decided to go back to school, it fit our budget and our busy schedule. It was also convenient because I could take classes in-person, locally.鈥
Hughes said she received tremendous support from both her instructors at CBC and 黑料社 Tri-Cities. When she started school, her sister was diagnosed with cancer. She served as her sister鈥檚 bone marrow transplant and was going to have to miss some school.
鈥淢y professors were so supportive through that,鈥 she said. 鈥淧rofessors from both programs are that way. They want you to succeed.鈥
Apply to Bridges
Applications are open now for the Bridges Program. For more information and to apply, visit tricities.wsu.edu/bridges. To qualify for the Bridges Program, students must apply in their first year at CBC and complete the 鈥淒eclaration of Intent鈥 form. Have questions or want to meet with someone about your options? Email tricities.bridges@wsu.edu.
For more information about CBC, visit . For more information about 黑料社 Tri-Cities, visit tricities.wsu.edu.