FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 31, 2006
Majority Leader Frist pledges support for Hispanic higher education agenda
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The majority leader of the Senate, William Frist, pledged to “do everything I can” to increase funding to the $100 million mark for Title V grants to Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) next year. Speaking at the annual Capitol Forum of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU), Frist affirmed his commitment to support key Hispanic higher education requests in the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act.
He said that Senate leadership is “working to authorize funding” for HSI graduate education programs and promised to work to eliminate “red tape” provisions like the two year wait out period between Title V grants and the low-income assurance requirement for Title V eligibility. Title V of the Higher Education Act is the chief vehicle for Federal funding for Hispanic-Serving colleges and universities.
Senator First also told the audience that he is committed to “a crusade to eradicate healthcare disparities” between races and ethnicities and promised that HSIs will be involved in these effort. Hispanics are the country’s largest and fastest-growing ethnic population, but suffer disproportionately from lower educational attainment and higher health risks.
The Majority Leader also addressed immigration issues currently receiving a great deal of attention on Capitol Hill and around the country. Senator Frist reminded the audience that “this nation was made great by men and women who longed for a better life and came to
As the only national higher education forum for Hispanics and Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs), HACU’s Capitol Forum brought together leaders of HACU’s 450 member colleges and universities with representatives of Congress, the White House and key federal agencies to promote Hispanic college and career success.
Although HSIs serve the largest concentrations of the Hispanic college-age population, HSIs continue to receive substantially less federal funding on average compared to all other degree-granting institutions. This inequity is compounded by the additional fact that HSIs serve a population that is disproportionately low-income and that suffers the lowest high school and college completion rates of any major population group.
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The Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU) was established in 1986 with a founding membership of eighteen institutions. Today, HACU represents more than 450 colleges and universities committed to Hispanic higher education success in the