The
big ugly boondoggle, which our President calls The
Big Beautiful Bill, is
a disgusting transfer of resources from the poor
to the wealthy, preserving 2017 tax cuts,
cutting Medicaid and SNAP (Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance program, or food stamps),
imposing new work requirements for benefits, and
increasing defense spending by at least thirteen
percent. Kasey Kosgarian, Director of the
National Priorities Project of the Institute for
Policy Studies posed our choices as “weapons and
war or food and health care”. We have apparently
chosen weapons and war, and apparently the rest
of us exist in peril.
Treatises
can be written about the odious bill, and the
many aspects that leave millions without health
care and food assistance, existing with a safety
net that has been maliciously shredded. We
shouldn’t be surprised, since this is what was
promised in Project 2025. We will pay in the
long run as our future, our students, will
encounter great obstacles as they attempt to
prepare themselves to be economically
competitive in the future.
I
am especially concerned about cuts to higher
education, and to Pell Grants, as part of the Big
Ugly. Grants
for higher education attendance were part of the
Higher Education Act, passed in 1965 as part of
President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society
Program. The Pell grant, named after Senator
Claiborne Pell (D-RI) was authorized in 1972 as
a Basic Educational Opportunity Grant (BEOG),
and was designed to provide grants to low income
families, as opposed to (or in addition to) the
loans that formerly funded higher education.
In
1972, Pell grants covered about 75 percent of
college costs, between $8000 and $9000 in
today’s dollars. The value of the Pell has
steadily eroded. In 2013, the maximum Pell was
$5645, again in today’s dollars. President Biden
increased the Pell to a maximum of $7395 for
academic year 2024. In contrast, the tuition and
fees at Howard University that year was $35,810.
The total cost of attendance was $58052. Some
families can pay some of the cost, but most low
income students cobble together Pell, loans,
outside scholarships, and parental
contributions. The Pell covered only a fifth of
Howard University’s tuition, and just an eighth
of the total cost of attendance.
The
Big Ugly will
make college access even more challenging. It
would cut the Pell to $5710, a 23 percent cut.
It would only provide the maximum Pell for
students who enroll for a full load of 15 credit
hours a semester. Often first-year students are
advised to take a lighter load, four classes
instead of five, especially if they may need
time to adjust to college. I’d rather a student
take a lighter load and achieve solidly, than to
have a student struggle with five classes.
About
40 percent of undergraduate students rely on
Pell grants to get through college. The lowest
among them will likely drop out. This imperils
our future. How are we to compete
internationally if millions of our students
can’t afford higher education?
The
legislation that cuts Pell grants, part of the Big
Ugly, also
limits or eliminates benefits to part-time and
community college students. A student who is
enrolled less than half time (7.5 credits) would
receive no Pell money at all. Yet millions of
students who work full time (or part time) and
attend school part time will lose benefits.
These include working moms and dads, differently
abled students, and others who can’t manage a
full time load. At a time when employment needs
demand flexibility, legislation is insisting on
punitive rigidity.
The
Department of Education has been so crippled by
this President’s “slash and burn” approach to
education that there is little input from the
department around the harmful effects of these
Pell changes. Who in Congress will speak up for
our nation’s students?
Our
young people are our future, yet we treat them
like debris. In divesting from college access
and attendance, we are divesting from our
futures. Our international rivals are investing
in education, while we are divesting. In the
long run, this will give them the competitive
advantage that will leave us falling even
further behind than we are now. Who gains?
Oligarchs! Predatory capitalists! And a
President who hawks Bibles and Alligator
Alcatraz instead of our robust American future.
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