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House Dems Get Second Crack at Higher Education Appropriations Bill

Published 25 February 09 04:23 PM | Student Loan Girl 

Just days after President Obama signed a $787 billion economic stimulus bill into law, House Democrats have reintroduced a $410 billion overdue appropriations measure that would finance dozens of federal agencies and programs, including many related to higher education, whose budgets went unapproved during the last session of Congress, reports The Chronicle of Higher Education (“Delayed Appropriations Bill Would Increase Pell Grant and Research Funds,” Feb. 24, 2009).

During the tail end of the Bush administration, democratic lawmakers chose to put the original appropriations bill on the back burner after President Bush threatened to veto any measure that would exceed his fiscal budget. Instead, legislators passed a “continuing resolution” to fund the budgetless organizations at fiscal 2008 levels through March 6, so that legislators could revisit the appropriations bill under a new administration.

Lawmakers, after being delayed by work on the stimulus bill, are finally taking a second look at the appropriations bill just days before the continuing resolution’s termination date and President Obama’s scheduled release of his fiscal year 2010 budget.

The proposed spending bill will “keep the government running and finish last year’s business,” said David Obey D-Wis., head of the House Appropriations Committee, as wells as complement the Obama administration’s economic recovery package.

While the proposed budget measure will provide expanded funding to a variety of agencies and programs, it currently offers few specific financing details. The Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education could get $133.7 million to fund projects intended to model improvements to college education and accessibility, the Gear Up program could get $313.2 million to help financially needy middle and high school students prepare for college, and the government’s student financial aid programs could get a $19.2 billion boost.

The House Appropriations Committee bill would also expand research funding for the National Institutes of Health by $938 million, and provide an additional $347 million in funding to the Federal Pell Grant Program, drawing on the budget previously allocated for the underutilized, and Bush administration-supported, Academic Competitiveness and National Science and Mathematics Access to Retain Talent grant programs.



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