Advocates for low-income students are hailing a new U.S. House of Representatives agreement that would increase funding for college access programs and minority-serving institutions in 2008.
The plan from House appropriators includes small gains for many key programs, including aid to historically Black and Hispanic institutions. Also, a year after the Bush administration proposed cuts or elimination of access programs such as TRIO and GEAR UP, both programs would receive small funding increases next year.
“We’ve had to fight just for the continued existence of these programs,” says Susan Trebach, spokeswoman for the Council for Opportunity in Education, a Washington, D.C.-based group that works with Talent Search, Upward Bound and other TRIO grantees. “It’s good to get an increase. It’s a big win for us.”
TRIO funding would increase by $40 million, to $868 million next year. That’s a sharp contrast to the Bush administration budgets presented in 2005 and 2006, which would have eliminated Talent Search and Upward Bound for a savings of more than $400 million.
Trebach, who expresses hope that the Senate will improve on the numbers, warns “The process isn’t over.”
GEAR UP would receive an additional $20 million, for a total of $323 million in funding. Officials say the increase may allow the U.S. Department of Education to hold a significant competition for new grant awards in 2008.
The White House also had sought GEAR UP’s elimination during the past two years.