(Akiit.com) When it comes to America’s more than 100 historically black colleges, the Bush administration is giving with one hand and taking back with the other.
President George W. Bush signed a law in September adding $85 million to the annual support of $238.1 million for Spelman College, Grambling State University in Louisiana and the other schools, saying it would help low-income Americans earn degrees and prepare them to compete for U.S. jobs. The Bush administration’s new budget cuts aid to the schools by the same amount, angering Democrats who helped provide the money.
“It’s devastating, a devastating effect, these kinds of cuts,” Sen. Edward Kennedy, the Massachusetts Democrat who heads the Senate Education Committee, said in an interview in Boston. “It doesn’t make sense to cut back in terms of vitally needed education programs.”
North Carolina Central University in Durham says students who are training to become special-education teachers may see support for their program eliminated. Efforts to recruit minority students to become math and science teachers may be slashed at dozens of the colleges.
Winston-Salem State University in North Carolina gets about $4.2 million from the U.S. government, partly to provide tutors for chemistry and computer-science programs, said Everette Witherspoon, the university official who monitors such funding. The money, more than 4 percent of the budget, also supports an honors program and evening classes.
“They would be scaled back,” Witherspoon said. The cut would hurt efforts “to compete as a mainstream university.”
Education Department officials defend the conflicting policy actions, saying the cutback returns funding to previous levels.
“We have to make tough budget decisions in priorities with discretionary spending,” said Samara Yudof, a spokeswoman for the Education Department. “Our budget reflects that.”
The government defines historically black colleges and universities as those established primarily to educate African-Americans before 1964, when the doors to most institutions were closed to them.
Some were founded even before the Civil War, the oldest being Cheyney University of Pennsylvania, which began in 1837 as the Institute for Colored Youth. Today, they represent about 3 percent of U.S. colleges and universities and account for about one-fourth of all African-American college graduates.
Winston-Salem had $21.8 million in endowment assets on June 30, ranking 676th among 785 North American colleges and universities reporting figures. Harvard University’s $34.9 billion fund, the world’s biggest college endowment, is about 1,600 times larger. Wake Forest University, also in Winston-Salem, has a $1.2-billion endowment.
Martin Luther King Jr. graduated from Morehouse College in Atlanta, author Alice Walker from Spelman in Atlanta, and civil-rights leader Jesse Jackson from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical University in Greensboro.
Maceo K. Sloan, a Durham, N.C., financier, graduated from Morehouse, and Harold E. Doley Jr., founder and chairman of Doley Securities Inc. in New Orleans, is an alumnus of Xavier University of Louisiana. Sloan couldn’t be reached and and Doley declined to comment.
House Republicans last year attacked the added spending for historically black institutions, as well as for colleges that predominantly serve Latinos and Native Americans, saying it didn’t provide direct aid to students. Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon, ranking Republican on the House education committee, said at a recent hearing that funding for black colleges has more than doubled from $109 million in 1995.
Bush now is seeking “significant mandatory and discretionary savings that are essential to meeting” his goal of eliminating the federal deficit by 2012, according to an Education Department budget summary issued in February.
The Bush budget would increase total federal spending by 6 percent for fiscal 2009. The proposal raises Defense Department spending by 7.5 percent as the U.S. pours money into the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Domestic spending, excluding defense and homeland security, would rise about 1 percent.
Tags: Black Colleges, black professors, black schools, black students, black teachers, Grambling State University in Louisiana, HBCU, historically black institutions, North Carolina Central University in Durham, Spelman College, Winston Salem State UniversityThis entry was posted on Sunday, March 30th, 2008 at 3:36 pm and is filed under African-American News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.