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Black Enrollment Lags At Florida’s Universities

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.

Black enrollment grew by only 1.6 percent in Florida’s state universities since last year compared to an overall increase of 2.6 percent, Gov. Jeb Bush and university officials announced Friday.

Hispanic enrollment, though, shot up by 7.3 percent.

The new figures are further evidence that Bush’s 1999 decision to abolish affirmative action for university enrollment and replace it with a program dubbed One Florida isn’t working, says Senate Democratic leader Les Miller of Tampa.

“It is an I-told-you-so situation,” he says.

Critics such as Miller had predicted that One Florida, which includes a provision granting university admission to the top 20 percent of each high school’s graduating class, would do little or nothing to increase Black enrollment.

State university system figures show Black enrollment has grown 19.7 percent since 1999 compared to an overall increase of 24 percent. Blacks now make up 13.7 percent of the university system’s enrollment, down from 14.2 percent in 1999.

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