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Higher-Education Officials and Senate Aides Discuss Colleges' Relief Needs
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More Coverage: Articles about how Hurricane Katrina has affected colleges, plus photo galleries, an interactive map, commentaries, and other information. Colloquy: Join a live, online discussion with Scott S. Cowen, president of Tulane University, today at 3 p.m., U.S. Eastern time, about the challenges ahead for his institution. Advance questions and comments are welcome and may be posted now. Katrina Update: Announcements from colleges, associations, and government agencies. Forum: Discuss the effects of the hurricane and exchange information. Charitable aid: Coverage from The Chronicle of Philanthropy.
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Headlines
Higher-education officials and Senate aides discuss colleges' relief needs Opinion: New Orleans and the probability blues Caribbean colleges, veterans at dodging hurricanes, endorse planning for the "worst-case scenario" NIH grants go much more often to men than women, a new study for Congress finds Visa delays and fears of visa delays remain problems for colleges, officials tell Congress New Web site offers conservative students a philosophical home and an intellectual arsenal Philippines appoints 3-star general as president of violence-racked university
Information Technology Washington
A broad coalition of higher-education lobbyists went to Capitol Hill on Tuesday to ask Senate aides to remember colleges when putting together a relief package for industries affected by Hurricane Katrina. Among the multitude of items on the lobbyists' wish list: financial assistance for colleges that have accepted students displaced by the storm and a new aid program that would encourage students to enroll in the future at Gulf Coast institutions temporarily closed by Katrina. The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions is rushing to finish a bill to provide federal aid and regulatory relief to businesses along the Gulf Coast. The legislation, which could be completed as early as today, is expected to reach the full Senate later this week or early next week. Exactly what type of relief for colleges will end up in the bill was unclear Tuesday afternoon. Lobbyists at Tuesday's meeting with staff members for the Senate committee said the participants did not talk about an overall dollar figure for federal aid, nor did they discuss in much precision details of what the higher-education groups want. "It was pointed out that we won't get everything," said David S. Baime, vice president for government relations at the American Association of Community Colleges. "There was an acknowledgment that there is a limit, but they also have the sense that higher education was hit." Before the meeting, the American Council on Education circulated a list of provisions the higher-education associations would like to see in the bill. Items on the list, obtained by The Chronicle, included:
"The overriding concern for economic development in the region is an incentive program to get students to return to Loyola [University New Orleans] and other colleges there," said Cynthia A. Littlefield, director of federal relations for the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities. "There also needs to be some sort of incentive program to have faculty and staff return." Nearly every sector of higher education was represented at Tuesday's meeting. Besides Mr. Baime and Ms. Littlefield, participants included officials from the American Council on Education, the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, the Career College Association, the United Negro College Fund, and Tulane University. The different groups each placed a different emphasis on their needs, Mr. Baime said. For two-year institutions, the biggest worry is that displaced students will never return to college. "This is an inevitable impact on students who generally already have so many other concerns and priorities even in the best of circumstances," said Mr. Baime. Community colleges, he added, will have an even larger work-force-training role in communities devastated by Katrina. What is eventually included in the bill could depend on how the Senate decides to pay for it. Lawmakers could use funds they expect to save through provisions in legislation to reauthorize the Higher Education Act. The chamber was supposed to use those dollars for deficit reduction, but the Congressional Budget Office estimates that the Senate reauthorization bill will generate an additional $7-billion in unexpected savings because of cuts to student-loan programs. "We would prefer that the money to help colleges recover from Katrina not come from the Higher Education Act," said Patricia Smith, director of federal-policy analysis for the American Association of State Colleges and Universities.
Background articles from The Chronicle:
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