Bill Reauthorizing D.C. Tuition Assistance
Program Clears House Committee
By David Pluviose
In a year of massive cuts to popular federal higher education programs, the House Government Reform Committee has recently passed a measure reauthorizing the District of Columbia College Access Act for another five years, ensuring the continued existence of the D.C. Tuition Assistance Grants (TAG) Program. This move comes after President Bush’s fiscal year 2007 budget proposed funding D.C. TAG at $35 million, a nearly $2 million increase from last year’s appropriation.
“The district doesn’t have any state university system, it has only one [university]. While college enrollment has lagged in the U.S., it has soared up in the district precisely because of this program. So it’s one of those great success stories in higher education that neither Republicans nor most Democrats want to let go,” says Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C.’s nonvoting delegate to Congress, who co-sponsored the tuition assistance bill.
D.C. TAG provides up to $10,000 to allow students from the district to attend any U.S. public college or university at in-state tuition rates. The program also allows up to $2,500 annually for students to attend certain regional private colleges or private HBCUs. According to Norton, Mayor Anthony A. Williams has credited the program — enacted in 1999 — for the 35 percent increase in college-attendance rates for district residents. The program has also stemmed the tide of district residents moving to the neighboring states of Maryland and Virginia in pursuit of in-state tuition.
While the program allows students to pay in-state tuition anywhere in the country, they cannot use those funds to attend the University of the District of Columbia, the city’s sole public higher education institution. Supporters of UDC say this puts the school at a competitive disadvantage, as it is still recovering from the halving of its operating budget in 1997 on orders from the Congressionally created D.C. Financial Control Board. For example, UDC art professor Dr. Meredith Rode dubs the D.C. College Access Act the “escaping UDC bill.” University spokesman Mike Andrews says UDC is simply seeking the same benefits granted to all other public universities.
“We understand the concerns of legislators in making education available across the board. It should be completely inclusive. … If there is such a program, which allows for tuition assistance, it should be tuition assistance to everybody. Instead of just going out of state, provide tuition assistance for students coming to the University of the District of Columbia,” Andrews says.