Pell Grants Increase May Aid Students in Upcoming Year
Sally Dadisman
Issue date: 3/12/07 Section: Holt News
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The rising cost of higher education is an
issue constantly at the forefront of public policy, and one President Bush is addressing in his $2.9 trillion 2008 budget released
Feb. 5.
The administration is proposing to raise the
maximum Pell Grant award by almost 14 percent, or $550, next year, the largest increase in more than 30 years. It also
calls for a 33 percent raise during the next fi ve years, reaching a maximum of $5,400. The current maximum grant is $4,050.
The Pell Grant is the federal government's main financial aid program for low-income students. Aside from financial need, factors
such as the cost of the school, status as full- or part-time student and length of time the student is planning to attend the school are also taken into consideration
when awarding the grant.
The award hasn't been increased since before 2002 and in the 2006-07 academic year the
grant covered 33 percent of the average cost of tuition, room and board and other fees at a four-year public school. This is a stark contrast from 20 years ago, when the award was enough to cover 60 percent of the cost of schooling.
"This is real money that will help more lowincome students achieve the dream of a college education," said secretary of education Margaret Spellings at a forum for
higher education held at North Carolina State University on Feb. 1.
Spellings remarks came four days before the offi cial release of the 2008 budget, a move that could have been in response to the House of Representatives passing a bill Jan. 31 in which the grant would increase by $260, or 6 percent, to be $4,310.
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