S-4778-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Sponsored by Martin Heinrich (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would authorize the Secretary of Education to award competitive grants to public colleges, nonprofit-college partnerships, and college consortia for fiscal years 2027 through 2032. Grant recipients would use funds to implement evidence-based programs aimed at increasing enrollment, retention, and graduation rates among "high-need students" — defined as low-income, first-generation, caregiver, disabled, stopped-out, justice-impacted, and military-connected students. The bill would reserve 2 percent of appropriated funds for Tribal Colleges and Universities and require at least 20 percent of remaining funds to go to institutions using the highest tier of evidence-based practices.
Who benefits
High-need college students — including low-income, first-generation, caregiver, disabled, stopped-out, justice-impacted, and military-connected students — who would receive expanded advising, tutoring, emergency financial aid, and career services. Tribal Colleges and Universities, which receive a dedicated 2 percent funding set-aside. Community colleges and 4-year public institutions that would gain new federal funding streams. Nonprofit educational organizations partnering with colleges. Employers and workforce systems that would benefit from a larger pool of credentialed graduates. Researchers and evaluators contracted to assess program effectiveness.
Who is hurt
Private for-profit institutions, which are excluded from the definition of "eligible entity" and cannot compete for grants. Private nonprofit colleges not partnered with a public institution, which are similarly ineligible. Institutions that lack the administrative capacity to develop competitive applications or meet evidence-tier requirements may be disadvantaged relative to larger, better-resourced schools. Taxpayers who bear the cost of the appropriation. Competing federal education programs may face indirect budget pressure if discretionary education spending is constrained.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. college completion crisis disproportionately harms low-income and first-generation students — groups that enroll at increasing rates but graduate at far lower rates than their peers — and that evidence-based interventions like advising, emergency aid, and accelerated learning have demonstrated measurable results in rigorous studies. They contend the bill's tiered evidence framework ensures taxpayer dollars flow only to programs with proven track records, and that the dedicated Tribal College set-aside addresses historically underserved institutions that face unique structural barriers to student success.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a new, duplicative federal grant program that overlaps with existing initiatives — such as TRIO, GEAR UP, and Title III — without consolidating or reforming those programs, adding administrative complexity without clear additive benefit. They contend that conditioning grants on federal evidence-tier definitions centralizes curriculum and program decisions that the Tenth Amendment reserves to states and institutions, and that a six-year competitive grant cycle may produce short-term interventions that institutions cannot sustain once federal funding expires, as the bill's own sustainability requirement implicitly acknowledges.