HR-4767-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by Johnny Olszewski (D-MD)
What it does
This bill would create two new programs within the State Department's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs: (1) a scholarship initiative bringing international students, scholars, and technical experts to U.S. community colleges and postsecondary vocational institutions for up to one academic year in fields such as agriculture, engineering, IT, and public health; and (2) a capacity-building grant program to help those same U.S. institutions develop and expand study abroad programs for their own students. It would also require the Secretary of State to consult with relevant congressional committees within one year of enactment on program implementation and priorities.
Who benefits
International students and scholars from underrepresented backgrounds who would gain access to U.S. technical and vocational training. U.S. community college and postsecondary vocational institution students who would gain new study abroad opportunities. Faculty and staff at eligible institutions who would receive training and resources to build exchange programs. Community colleges and vocational schools as institutions, which have historically been excluded from federally funded exchange programs dominated by four-year universities. Employers in STEM, agriculture, and technical sectors who may benefit from a more internationally experienced workforce. U.S. foreign policy interests in development sectors such as water security, food systems, and public health in partner countries.
Who is hurt
Four-year universities and existing exchange program administrators who may face increased competition for State Department grant funding. Taxpayers who would bear the cost of new program administration, though no specific appropriation is included in the bill text. Community colleges that do not meet the eligibility criteria (e.g., those without existing State Department or USAID relationships) may be disadvantaged relative to already-connected institutions. Students at ineligible institutions who would not have access to the new capacity-building resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that community colleges and vocational institutions serve over 10 million students annually — disproportionately low-income, first-generation, and minority students — yet are largely absent from federally funded international exchange programs that have historically centered four-year research universities. They contend that expanding exchanges in practical fields like agriculture, water sanitation, and information technology directly advances U.S. development goals and soft-power interests, while giving underrepresented American students access to global experiences that improve workforce competitiveness in high-demand technical sectors.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates new federal bureaucratic programs without authorizing specific funding, raising questions about whether the initiatives would be adequately resourced or would simply divert existing State Department exchange budgets away from proven programs. They contend that the "should seek to" directive language in Section 3 is non-binding and may result in minimal implementation, and that adding new program layers within the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs could increase administrative overhead without producing measurable foreign policy outcomes.