“happymomof1” has brought up an issue which does not seem to get a lot of attention. There are some very fine engineering schools with articulation agreements with community colleges, but look into the details of the articulation programs. The specifics of these agreements are important as demonstrated in the Virginia Tech agreement which only guarantees admission with the 3.2 GPA to the general engineering curriculum while other majors are conditioned on available space. You can read the Virginia Tech articulation agreement at https://vt.edu/admissions/transfer/agreements.html
ABET accredited programs are highly recommended for employment and graduate school placement. ABET rules do not forbid non engineering minors. However, when I look through the Virginia Tech website I could not find discussion of non-engineering minors for their engineering majors. You might call their admissions office and ask direct questions.
If the program fits your academics goals, you will save money and it would be a work-around the admissions issue. It is not as straight forward as it would seem.
I did not know that George Mason had an engineering program so I went to the ABET website to learn more. They do have some ABET accredited programs, but are missing some important majors such as Mechanical Engineering (ME). See http://main.abet.org/aps/AccreditedProgramsDetails.aspx?OrganizationID=383&ProgramIDs=. You may check for other ABET programs as the same site.
Clarkson has engineering depth and a well established reputation. It has a 640 acre campus. Rural is out of fashion right now. They have merit awards. It is my favorite quality backup. See https://www.clarkson.edu/ You can look at possible minors @ https://www.clarkson.edu/undergraduate/minors. This includes humanities minors which would fit into your ABET accredited engineering program. They have a 640 acre campus and rural is not in fashion now. If not yet, you will become a hockey fan.
Given your interest in a broad engineering program with a variety of none engineering minors I was surprised that my University was not on your list. Admission has become difficult, but so are the others listed. Do you have demonstrated financial need? The average GPA of entering freshman in 2017 was 3.86. I would say that 90.21 is not out of the mix but merit money would not be likely. They do a pretty good job of meeting need. WPI and Brown probably have the most flexible ABET programs going. Interdisciplinary thinking is strongly encouraged. On the engineering side, WPI has the depth.
WPI '67