Free Community College is off the federal table, says Jill Biden 

Free Community College
Jill Biden

Jill Biden, the first lady, expressed that the administration will not be able to procure free community college for Americans. Thereby, implying that a key factor of President Biden’s economic programme will no longer continue. Biden’s Build Back Better programme included two years of free community college for all qualifying students. It was a remarkable effort for the first lady, who is a veteran community college professor.

The first lady’s symbolic legislative idea was off the table inside a massive social spending package that has toiled to gain the acceptance of all senators who caucus with the Democrats. However, Jill Biden spoke to a summit of community college officials on Monday and reiterated what her husband had already started. The proposal certainly had no future in the package that Democrats are attempting to save.

Real Lesson

“One year ago, I told this group that Joe, my husband Joe, was going to fight for community colleges,” she said at the Community College National Legislative Summit in Washington. “But Joe has also had to make compromises. Congress hasn’t passed the Build Back Better legislation — yet. And free community college is no longer a part of that package.”

“We knew this wouldn’t be easy,” Biden said. “Still, like you, I was disappointed. Because, like you, these aren’t just bills or budgets to me, to you, right? We know what they mean for real people, for our students.”

And then she added: “It was a real lesson in human nature that some people just don’t get that.”

Biden’s free community college plan was an initial version of Build Back Better. It would have contributed $45.5 billion to cover the expense of two years of tuition and fees for eligible students at community colleges in partaking states and qualified Tribal Colleges and Universities. The financing was to last five years, after which there would be a reduction of 5% each year. The federal part of the maintenance was to be 100% for the first year of the programme, with no state contribution necessary. Later on, the federal/state split would have shifted to 95/5, 90/10, 85/15, and 80/20 in succeeding years.

However, the president has all but abandoned the proposal. Thus, telling reporters in January that he doubts that free community college would a part of a revised spending plan. Moreover, high dropout rates and poor outcomes at some of the schools were reasons by critics of the community college concept. Fewer than 40% of community college students acquire a degree within six years.

The end of a federal plan to make community college tuition-free certainly does not suggest that the program ended in roughly 20 states that were to deliver numerous arrangements of what commonly refers to as “Promise” programmes. 

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