$250,000,000 HBCU Innovation Fund Act Introduced to Congress

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Representative Alma Adams, Democrat of North Carolina, and the 100th woman in the 113th Congress, on Nov. 12, 2014. 

SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images

Congresswoman Alma S. Adams, of the 12th Congressional district of North Carolina announced this week the introduction of the HBCU Innovation Fund Act, or H.R.4857, reports HBCU Buzz.

The legislation would create  the HBCU Innovation Fund, where $250 million in competitive grants would be made available to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) across the country, and allow for the planning and implementation of programs that improve student achievement, increase recruitment, increase graduation rates and increase enrollment and completion of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics degrees, reports the outlet.

The legislation would also help HBCUs redesign course offerings to improve student outcomes and reduce education costs; enhance the quality and number of teacher preparation programs; expand the use of technology; and strengthen postgraduate employment outcomes for students.

As has been reported over the last few years, HBCUs and their students have been decimated by changes to federal loan programs (including Parent Plus loans); declining student enrollment in a “post-racial America”; low graduation rates; and fundraising difficulties. Many recognize, though, that HBCUs are a haven for some black students and entree for many into higher education.

“HBCUs provide opportunities for many low-income, first generation and often minority students to get a quality education,” said Congresswoman Adams, the co-chair of the Bipartisan Congressional HBCU Caucus and member of the House Subcommittee on Higher Education.

“HBCUs give students the chance they deserve to succeed; however, they have been historically underfunded and lack many of the resources needed to address some of their most extreme challenges. The HBCU Innovation Fund Act is one way to help close some of the gaps that persist on HBCU campuses and within HBCU administrations.”

Adams, who received her bachelors and masters from North Carolina A&T University, is joined in cosponsorship of the HBCU Innovation Fund Act by a bevy of African American Congresspersons including Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC), Corrine Brown (FL), Barbara Lee (CA), Donna F. Edwards (MD), Sheila Jackson Lee (TX), Stacey E. Plaskett (VI), Alcee L. Hastings (FL), Bennie G. Thompson (MS), Terri A. Sewell (AL), Joyce Beatty (OH),  Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ), Eddie Bernice Johnson (TX) and Chaka Fattah (PA). It is also cosponsored by Representatives Patrick Murphy (FL), Chris Van Hollen (MD) and Steve Cohen (TN).

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