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Lawmakers press state leaders on land-grant HBCU funding gaps

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In September, the Biden administration pressed 16 governors from both political parties to address chronic underfunding of their states’ historically Black land-grant universities. 

These HBCUs collectively missed out on more than $12 billion from 1987 to 2020, according to an analysis of federal data from the Education and Agriculture departments. 

Education Secretary Miguel Cardona and Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack sent states individual letters detailing their land-grant HBCUs’ level of underfunding. Tennessee and North Carolina had the largest deficits of more than $2 billion.

The issue of inequitable funding between HBCUs and predominantly White institutions is not new to college leaders. Now, state lawmakers are reacting to the Biden administration’s new figures, with some calling for legislative change and others disputing the federal findings.

State lawmakers press for action

The Biden administration identified a $603 million per-student state funding gap between the University of Georgia and Fort Valley State University, a land-grant HBCU in the state. Georgia state Reps. Sandra Scott, Viola Davis and Kim Schofield, all Democrats, are threatening legal action if state leaders don’t close the divide.

On Thursday, the trio said they sent a letter to Georgia’s governor, the University System of Georgia’s chancellor, and the system’s governing board chair, urging them to correct the gap within 10 days “before further legal action is taken.”

Lincoln University, a Missouri land-grant HBCU, received almost $362 million less in per-student funding than the University of Missouri over the course of three decades, Cardona and Vilsack said in their letter to Republican Gov. Mike Parson.

In response, Missouri lawmakers are making a bipartisan push to get the state to analyze its history of systemically underfunding Lincoln, Democratic Rep. Kevin Windham told The Missouri Independent last week.

The proposal is inspired by Tennessee’s 2021 study that found its land-grant HBCU, Tennessee State University, may have missed out on up to $544 million in state funding. The goal, Windham said, is to repair Lincoln’s programming and infrastructure.

In Oklahoma, state Sen. George Young and Rep. Jason Lowe, both Democrats, said they were disappointed but not surprised by the notable funding inequities the Education and Agriculture departments identified.

Langston University, Oklahoma’s land-grant HBCU, received almost $419 million less in state funding per student than Oklahoma State University over the course of three decades, according to the Biden administration. 

“$419 million is a lot of money to the coffers of almost any institution, but to Langston it’s a substantial sum to help the realm of education in our state,” Young said in a September statement. “This ‘oversight’ has been well publicized and investigated. It is time to correct it!”

Lowe agreed, saying both sides of the aisle dropped the ball. 

“Clearly, Democrats and Republicans have failed this great institution,” he said. “I look forward to examining this issue in greater detail during the upcoming legislative session.” 

Oklahoma’s next legislative session starts in February. 

In Mississippi, outgoing state Rep. Alyce Clarke, a Democrat, said lawmakers must address the almost $258 million per-student funding disparity identified by the Biden administration between the state’s land-grant HBCU, Alcorn State University, and Mississippi State University.

“MSU is not to blame for receiving the funding it has received over the years to grow and prosper,” Clarke told WJTV. “However, it is unfair to Alcorn State students when their institution did not receive the same equity in funding.”

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Laura Spitalniak

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