Minnesota lawmakers say they’ve found $5 million to plug a funding gap that threatened to upend the college careers of former foster children who use state grants to pay for tuition and living expenses.
“This is an extremely important issue for us,” said Sen. Omar Fateh, DFL-Minneapolis, who chairs the Senate Higher Education Committee. “What we know is that these grants help a population that is less likely to go to college and more likely to drop out.”
Hundreds of Minnesotans rely on the Fostering Independence Grant Program to help cover tuition and housing costs. Leaders with the state’s Office of Higher Education warned lawmakers earlier this year that inflation and increased demand were squeezing the program’s budget, so they’d need to find another $5 million or place about 40% of applicants on a waitlist next year.
Staff at nonprofit Foster Advocates had been talking Wednesday about how they could support grant recipients throughout the uncertainty, which left some of the students wondering if they’d be able to continue their studies next year or support their families. Then, they got an unexpected call alerting them of the deal.
When Ziigwan Frazer, the group’s policy and advocacy manager, began calling the students, she could “hear the weight lifted.” When they asked what would happen in future years, she told them: “Let’s pause, and just say, let’s take this win.”
To plug the funding hole, Fateh and Rep. Gene Pelowski, DFL-Winona, chair of the House Higher Education Finance and Policy Committee, are proposing the state transfer a portion of the $117 million it had set aside for the new North Star Promise Scholarship Program, which offers free tuition at public colleges to students whose families make less than $80,000 per year.
Pelowski said he met Wednesday with Fateh and “we agreed it would be the best way to do it,” noting that there was “a huge need” for the Fostering Independence Grants and that the transfer wouldn’t change the overall amount of state spending.
Lawmakers said they expect legislation to be introduced soon and described this as a temporary solution to help students get through the next school year.