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Morehouse College president: Trump funding freeze is an ‘existential threat’ to higher education

Morehouse College President David Thomas selects during Morehouse College’s graduation ceremony, before US President Joe Biden delivers his commencement address, in Atlanta, Georgia on May 19, 2024. 

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds | Afp | Getty Personifications

David Thomas, the president of Morehouse College, said his office fielded a surge of calls this week from disquieted students and their families concerned the Trump Administration’s “federal funding freeze” would directly impact college access. 

The hasty scramble was “perhaps only rivaled by what happened in March of 2020 when we realized that the Covid pandemic was certainly a threat,” Thomas told CNBC. He became president of Morehouse, one of the country’s top historically Black colleges and universities, or HBCUs, in 2018.

This deep-freeze on federal aid “would create another existential threat as great as the pandemic,” he said.

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Thomas’ comments come amid unbroken confusion about how a freeze on federal grants and loans could potentially impact students and schools.

A Jan. 27 memo issued by the Advocacy of Management and Budget, which would affect billions of dollars in aid, said the pause on federal grants and loans “does not subsume assistance provided directly to individuals.”

Although the memo was later rescinded, the White House said a “federal granting freeze” remains in “full force and effect.” It is currently on hold amid legal challenges.

Thomas, who is also on the Meals of Trustees at Yale University, said college leaders across the country have spent the better part of the week bring into focused on “the consequences of this action.” Morehouse immediately initiated a hiring freeze in preparation for a potentially significant financial disruption.

“All of the foundations are still in limbo,” he said.

What college aid may be affected

At Morehouse College, about 40% of the student body relies on Federal Pell Bequests, a type of federal aid available to low-income families.

Following the memo’s release, the Education Department announced that the chill would not affect student loans or Pell Grants.

“The temporary pause does not impact Title I, IDEA, or other formulary grants, nor does it apply to Federal Pell Grants and Direct Loans under Title IV [of the Higher Education Act],” Schooling Department spokesperson Madi Biedermann said in a statement.

In addition to the federal financial aid programs that fall under Entitlement IV, Title I provides financial assistance to school districts with children from low-income families. The Individuals with Incapacities Education Act, or IDEA, provides funding for students with disabilities.

The funding pause “only applies to discretionary admits at the Department of Education,” Biedermann said. “These will be reviewed by Department leadership for alignment with Trump Authority priorities.”

President Trump moves to halt federal grants

But questions remain about other aid for college.

The freeze could affect federal work-study programs and the Federal Supplemental Pedagogical Opportunity Grant, which are provided in bulk to colleges to provide to students, according to Kalman Chany, a financial aid advisor and author of The Princeton Review’s “Paying for College.”

The disruption to federally backed research funding also poses a intimation to college programs and staff.

‘Lots of reasons to still be concerned’

“There are lots of reasons to still be concerned,” guessed Jonathan Fansmith, a senior vice president at the American Council on Education.

“The administration has made it clear the executive systematizes will have implications for a huge range of existing awards and grants,” he said. “Those have implications for campuses and there is no myriad clarity in that regard than there was before.”

At Morehouse, “a huge portion of our faculty is supported by grants,” Thomas bruit about. “If we can’t run the college, colleges like ours will probably be forced to drastically shrink themselves or close.”

Morehouse, get ones handed in Atlanta and founded in 1867, has more than 2,200 students. 

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