Out of county?? What does that have to do with Community College? I've only heard of out of state tuition fees being different than in-state fees. I know students at my school that transfer to other community colleges for various reasons, but it doesn't change their residency rate. Some go to TAG into the UC schools, some go because they failed a class twice and have to jump through hoops to take it again, sometimes they just want to get out of the area and into a larger city. Check with the school to make sure you would pay the higher fee. Sometimes that's waived if there is no school where you are.
45 minute drive each way isn't that bad. I would assume a 20-25 mile drive. Get her
AAA coverage with a 100 miles for towing. She'll have to fly the coop sometime, might as well give her a taste of the real world. Most people don't get to live and work in the same small community with a minimal commute. Usually there's small campus branches in smaller cities. Even the school I go to now has two outside campuses in surrounding smaller towns besides the two main campus sites.
Class schedules can be made to shorten the amount of days she's on campus. There's also online courses for her to stay home. Most 3 credit classes are 1 times a weeks for 3 hours or twice a week for 1.5hrs each day. She can easily fit 2-3 classes in two days and take one or two online. 5 credit courses are harder, most of those are one hour daily or three times a week. The benefit of staying on campus all day for three classes if they're spread out, it will give her ample opportunity to study and do homework. She's more likely to get work done if she's not at home lounging around. Just make sure she brown bags her lunch vs buying junk food on campus (easy to do no matter how close she is to home).
I know for my school, it's about 4 times the cost to attend CSU over the community college, and that amount is way more than $5,500 loan amount.
I know it's your family/daughter, and there's probably a million more factors into selecting a school. However, don't cross off an idea because the expenses are different. You should detail each list realistically, gas, commute, food, books, tuition fees, student fees, and her ability to be flexible with classes and majors.
$76 a credit hour here, so I guess we are super lucky.
Students at my school were mad as can be when they raised the tuition rate $8 to a whopping $46 a unit.
ETA: I've only gone to school in CA and FL, neither have tuition based on counties, just in-state and out-of-state.