HR-793-118
ASSUMING FIRST SPONSORSHIP - Ms. Blunt Rochester asked unanimous consent that she may hereafter be considered as the first sponsor of H.R. 793, a bill originally introduced by Representative Johnson (OH), for the purpose of adding cosponsors and requesting reprintings pursuant to clause 7 of rule XII. Agreed to without objection.
What it does
The bill would create a new "Job Training Federal Pell Grant" category, extending existing Pell Grant funding to students without a degree who enroll in short-term career and technical education programs (150–600 instructional hours over 8–15 weeks) at accredited institutions of higher education. Eligible programs must be aligned with high-skill, high-wage, or in-demand industries. Any time a student uses this new grant would count against their overall Pell Grant lifetime eligibility limit.
Who benefits
Adults without college degrees seeking short-term workforce credentials, particularly those re-entering the job market or changing careers. Students who cannot afford or commit to multi-year degree programs. Workers in industries undergoing automation or layoffs who need rapid retraining. Community colleges and vocational schools that offer qualifying short-term programs, which would gain access to a new pool of federally funded students. Employers in high-demand sectors (e.g., healthcare, skilled trades, technology) who may gain a larger pool of credentialed workers.
Who is hurt
Students who use this grant would have that time counted against their lifetime Pell Grant eligibility (currently a 12-semester limit), potentially reducing funds available for a future degree program. Traditional four-year colleges and universities could face increased competition for students and tuition revenue. Taxpayers would bear the cost of expanded grant funding. Low-quality or predatory short-term programs that do not meet the bill's criteria would be excluded, potentially affecting those institutions' enrollment. Students who complete a job training program but find the credential does not lead to promised employment outcomes would have spent limited Pell eligibility with reduced benefit.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current Pell Grant system leaves behind millions of working adults who need short-term credentials to enter or advance in the workforce but cannot afford or commit to a two- or four-year degree. By extending Pell eligibility to programs as short as eight weeks, the bill would remove a financial barrier for low-income workers seeking rapid, targeted training in fields with demonstrated employer demand. Proponents contend that aligning grant eligibility with high-wage, in-demand sectors ensures public funds are directed toward credentials with real labor market value, reducing the risk of students taking on costs for programs with poor employment outcomes. They also note that the bill builds on the proven Pell Grant infrastructure rather than creating a new bureaucracy, and that expanding access to short-term credentials could help address persistent workforce shortages in sectors like healthcare, construction, and information technology.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending Pell Grants to very short programs — some as brief as eight weeks — risks directing limited federal financial aid toward low-quality credentials that may not deliver lasting economic benefit to students. Critics contend that the existing Pell Grant system was designed for substantive academic programs, and that lowering the bar to 150 clock hours could expose students to predatory institutions that market short courses primarily to capture federal dollars. They further argue that because time spent on job training grants counts against a student's lifetime Pell eligibility, a student who later pursues a degree could find their aid reduced, potentially leaving the most vulnerable students worse off in the long run. Opponents also raise concerns about the fiscal cost of expanding eligibility and whether the "high-skill, high-wage, or in-demand" standard is sufficiently rigorous to prevent misuse of public funds.