By Robbie Sequeira
Universities known as the historically black colleges and HBCUs, Trump leadership, in the federal financing for higher education, in the federal financing of the US Department of Education and the purpose of the US Education Department, thinks about the survival of an uncertain and controversial educational environment.
In January, President Donald Trump signed an order that concerns the HBCUs and loans worried about the HBCUs, which rely on Pell grants or federal assistance. The order was later revoked, but ongoing incisions left the main support systems in the political limbo, Deputy Director of Denise Smith, Director of Higher Education and the head of the head of the century, in the center of thought.
Leaders, Trump’ın Fair Initiative said they were concerned about a climate change program that relying on the HBCU to solve the problems of justice. And uncertainty around programs such as federal work research and trio provides college access services for unusual students.
“People are wax, because we start to see a cold effect.” “There is a real fear that resources can be lost at any time – even those who need to live anymore.”
The majority of students in HBCUS are preparing for Pell grants or other federal assistance, one-fifth of black college graduates from the HBCUS. Other institutions that serve other minorities known as MSI, which focus on the Spanish and American populations, depend on the federal assistance.
“HBCUS and MSIS are likely to say what these cuts will mean for HBCU and MSIs,” he said.
States may be less likely to organize any potential federal financial cuts to the Public HBCUS. Schools have already been redeemed by states compared to white schools.
The Congress has established public and land grant universities in Morrill, serving the country’s agricultural and industrial industries in 1862 to serve the country’s agriculture and industrial industries, and the state of the State to the agricultural and industrial industry. But black students were excluded.
1890 Morrill is not required to integrate grant organizations in many areas of land grant organizations for legal black students and the required states required. These schools have faced chronic remains compared to most and white counterparts since then.
‘None of them are not fair’
In 2020, in 2020, in 2020, the Middle Honduu of the White Land Grant University was $ 1.9 billion in $ 1.9 billion and the HBCUs in total $ 34 million.
There are other hbcus from 1890, including Fisk University, Howard University, Morehouse College and Spelman College. However, more than three-quarters of HBCU students participate in state universities, ie state deputies play an important role in financing and supervision.
Marybeth Gasman, a distinguished chair of the University of Education and Rutgers, has not yet been impressed by what states of what countries are employed by HBCus and other minorities. He said that it is not sure that it is a better known state model in the nation of public financing for these institutions, even in their supported countries.
“I do not think that the state level of North Carolina or Maryland is particularly good. There are other states. In HBCU, students (mostly white organizations) are financed by about 50-60% of students.”
“Most of the US Congress came from the US Congress and is the result of an important work of HBCUS and related organizations. I do not know a well-running state model for none to be fair.”
During the Federal Law, the countries who accept the federal land grant financing are required to adapt to each dollar with state funds.
However, in 2023, Biden’s leadership sent letters to the Waltens to the Walks, which had more than $ 12 billion in the three decades of public black land grant organizations.
Tennessee State University, the University of Tennessee, Knoxville University had a $ 2.1 billion gap.
At the Tennessee State President of Tennessee State of the State Legal Legal Legal Legal Tennessee State President Dwayne Tucker’s house, the school said that the school was aimed at asking the school to know that the school works.
Otherwise, Tucker, then, the organization has run out of cash in April or May.
“It’s real money. This is the money we have to work,” Tucker said according to the video of the forum.
In some states, the lawsuits were a course of action to withdraw with a long time.
In Maryland, a $ 577 million legal settlement was reached in 2021 to pay decades of decades in four public hbjus.
In Georgia, three HBCUs sued three HBCU students in 2023 to suspend three HBCU.
Tennessee, Tennessee State University in the last 100, Tennessee State University reached about $ 150 million for about $ 150 million.
However, Tucker said that the province of the case of the claim was not much sense.
“There is no account to pay $ 2.1 billion in Tennessee,” Tucker said at the February Forum. “And if we want to conclude that if (this money) is real, you must sue the situation of Tennessee and do not think that this makes it very much.”
Board
19 State, Washington, DC and the United States are concentrated in a large number of HBCUs in a large number of HBCUs among the Virgin Islands.
Alabama is the most northern hbu in the most, 14 and Pennsylvania.
Outside of education, HBCUS produces about $ 15 billion in local economies every year, 134,000, and proving that they have a economic anchor in the resource, make $ 46.8 billion in career earnings.
The incidents returning home in HBCUS, the local economy has increased significantly, local affairs. Homeoming of the Central University of North Carolina, every year makes a contribution to Durham’s economy.
Similarly, about $ 3 million in Hampton and the coastal Virgia region of Hampton University, for about $ 3 million, visitor costs and retail sales. In Tallahassee, Florida A & M University in October 2024, won $ 5.1 million on Sunday on Sunday, October 2024.
Their importance is like South Carolina, like South Carolina, like North Carolina, which is only 16% of the four-year school of HBCUS, but is pronounced as North Carolina, which is 45% of the black bachelor’s population.
One of the things he saw in states such as Smith, Maryland, Northern Carolina and Tennessee, 20 hbcus combined in 20 hbcus. According to him, MPs took a sensitive steps to expand support to HBCU through politics and finance.
Tennessee became the first state to appoint a high-level enterprise of a full state education for the success of HBCU for institutions such as Fisk and Tennessee, in 2018. At the same time, North Carolina launched the bicatisan, Bicatisan, who promotes 10 HBCU’s lawyer and 10 HBCUs with a $ 1.7 billion annual economic influence in 2023.
“We have created a bipartisan HBCU Caucasian to understand the importance of these institutions to people importance.
“Permanent education – tell people to come and see people to come and see,” he said. “Finally, it’s like to constantly beat the drum until he finally hears Heat.”
Propaganda for the HBCUS for Robinson can be a difficult task, especially when friends are not aware of these institutions. The North Carolina A & T historically was historically among the 1890 land grant universities in the federal agriculture and extension financing.
The Promised Education Plan of NC, which began in 2018, was reduced to $ 500 per semester, in a semester in a semester in a semester in a semester in a semester of HBCUS Elizabeth City State University and Fayetteville State University; University of Western Carolina, an institution serving Spanish; In 1887, in Pembroke and Pembroke established to serve the Indian Indians.
Conversations on the floor of the General Assembly and on both sides of the aisle, Robinson and Robinson, Robinson, HBCU and HBCU and the HBCU and the HBCU provided HBCU to ensure HBCU.
“I hope we are here before,” Robinson said in an interview.
“These institutions were built by churches and people who do not have anything, they just studied,” Robinson said. “We have people in strong positions within the country. We must use our strength and sounds. Alumni must step.
“Hard but not returning.”
Meanwhile, other states try to recognize certain colleges that provide significant support to black college students. Last year, in California, the country has given the right to establish an institutional organization that serves the first such title. In schools, with a five-year plan to develop them, there should be programs aimed at black achievements, retention and graduation rates. Sacramento takes the first destination.
And this session, California State AssemblyMember Mike Gipron, a Democratic democratic democratic democratic demand, a $ 75 million grant program that requires a 1-5 year with the appointment of black service organizations. The bill was referred to the last meeting of the recent Assembly.

