Source: United States Senator for New Mexico Martin Heinrich
ALBUQUERQUE (Sept. 10, 2021) – U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) announced the College Completion Fund Act, landmark legislation he plans to introduce to promote college completion in a thoughtful, innovative, and comprehensive way, and address longstanding inequities in college access and success.
Senator Heinrich unveiled the legislation during a virtual briefing today hosted by the Institute for Higher Education Policy (IHEP), in partnership with TICAS and Results for America, and with support from UnidosUS and Third Way—organizations all dedicated to the success of today’s students and are calling for a once-in-a-generation investment in the College Completion Fund (CCF). Senator Heinrich, along with U.S. Representative Joaquin Castro, delivered opening remarks followed by panelists who shared some of the inspiring practices from across the country that the College Completion Fund would support.
“We’ve focused for so long on how we can get students into college, but we need to focus just as much on how to help students get through college. Completion is the key to unlocking the long-term career success that is the promise of higher education,” said Heinrich. “The College Completion Fund Act would establish a first-of-its-kind federal fund to invest in evidence-based student support services that have proven to help students from diverse backgrounds complete their degrees.”
The College Completion Fund Act would authorize $62 billion to be distributed by the U.S. Department of Education over the next 10 years to invest in evidence-based strategies to help college students stay engaged in their education and complete their degrees. Funds will be allocated to states based on a formula using Census tract poverty data to ensure the funding reaches the under-resourced schools with students in the most need of support.
In order to receive these funds, states will need to develop strategic plans to increase graduation and completion rates for all students enrolled in their public colleges and universities. These plans will need to particularly focus on strategies to support students from low-income backgrounds and historically underrepresented communities, first-generation college enrollees, parenting students, students with disabilities, and student veterans.
Colleges and universities will be able to use these funds for a variety of evidence-based and promising practices that support student retention, completion, and success, including:
- Comprehensive academic support services such as faculty, career coaching, and peer counseling
- Collection of real-time data on student progress
- Incentives to keep students on track in their education
- Direct student support such as mental health services, child care, transportation, emergency financial assistance, food and housing assistance, career coaching, and work-based learning opportunities
- Reforms to developmental education, including utilizing career pathways and improving transfer student success
A broad coalition of educators and community advocates is calling on leaders in the House and Senate to make sure that the final version of the Build Back Better Plan that Congress passes later this year includes Senator Heinrich’s College Completion Fund Act.
“The benefits of higher education are nothing short of transformational for individuals, families, communities, and our country as a whole – but only if students make it over the completion finish line. Even before the pandemic, at least 36 million people had some college, but no degree, and the rates of completion reveal major inequities along racial and socioeconomic lines. The College Completion Fund Act would make a once-in-a-generation investment in the human, financial, and technological capacity needed to leverage the diversity of our nation’s talent and realize the economic – and non-economic – benefits of higher education. This bill’s level of investment is proportionate to the magnitude of the challenge at hand and the payoff it could provide by building a more just and equitable shared future,” said Mamie Voight, Interim President of IHEP.
“College completion—not enrollment alone—is what sets students on a path toward stable lives and careers, and we have a robust evidence base that shows what works in helping them persist through graduation. Unfortunately, the federal government has for too long been agnostic as to whether a taxpayer-funded college actually gets its students across the finish line—resulting in a situation where nearly half of those who start higher education never complete it. Third Way is pleased to support the College Completion Fund Act, which follows through on President Biden’s stated commitment to a landmark $62 billion investment in scaling proven practices that will support students from coast to coast in earning a college degree,” said Lanae Erickson, Senior Vice President for Social Policy & Politics at Third Way.
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