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Wednesday,
October 17, 2001
U.S.
House votes to increase grant funding
By Andrew S. Holbrook
Harvard Crimson
CAMBRIDGE,
Mass. (U-WIRE) Maximum awards to undergraduates through
the federal governments Pell grant program would increase
by $250 to $4,000 per year under a provision passed last week
by the U.S. House of Representatives.
The
$250 boost in the cap on Pell grants is significantly larger
than the $100 increase President Bush had proposed earlier
this year in his education budget.
The
Department of Education awards Pell grants to about 4 million
undergraduates each year, based on their families financial
needs and the costs of the colleges they attend.
The
grants are capped for each student, a ceiling that has been
raised in recent years. For the 1997-98 school year the maximum
award was $2,700. Last year it had increased
to $3,750.
The
Bush administration argued for a smaller increase because
as the economy slows the DOE predicts more people will enroll
in school and put pressure on the programs budget.
The larger $250 increase in maximum Pell awards will cost
the government an estimated $700 million more, about a 10
percent increase from the programs current cost.
Harvard
University financial aid officers welcomed the Congressional
action.
The
increase in the Pell grant is actually a wonderful bit of
news for students nationwide, particularly for students who
are attending institutions that dont have a lot of institutional
financial aid, said Harvards Director of Financial
Aid Sally C.
Donahue.
For students who are at less well-endowed institutions
the Pell grant might be their only form of grant money.
Pell
grants make up only a small part of the colleges student
aid packages. Of about 3,000 undergraduates on financial aid,
only 20 percent receive Pell grants. The total Pell money
from the DOE to Harvard students totaled $1.2 million last
year, out of a total $54 million in grant funds given to Harvard
undergraduates, Donahue said.
The
measure was sponsored in the House by Rep. Ralph Ragula (R-Ohio),
chairman of the subcommittee that funds the DOE, and Rep.
David Obey (D-Wis.), the ranking Democrat on that subcommittee.
In
the past two weeks Ragula and Obey met with White House and
Senate education leaders to negotiate a larger Pell allotment,
said David P. Sirota, Obeys press secretary. He said
Obey threatened a serious stalemate over the appropriation
measure if a larger increase was not granted.
Even
after those talks the education funding bill that includes
the Pell increase remains far from the Presidents desk.
It still must pass the Senate, and discrepancies between the
House and Senate versions will have to be hammered out in
a conference committee.
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