President Biden’s Executive Order To Make HBCUs More Equitable And Affordable Forgot The One Issue Making Life Harder for Black Students

President Biden’s Executive Order To Make HBCUs More Equitable And Affordable Forgot The One Issue Making Life Harder for Black Students


President Joe Biden released an executive order last week to advance educational and economic opportunities, however he forgot the one issue plaguing Black college students.

The executive order aims to address racial disparities between HBCUs and majority-White schools by implementing new strategies to advance by expanding their access to federal funds and establishing a board of HBCU leaders to promote the school’s best interests.

“It is the policy of my Administration to advance educational equity, excellence, and economic opportunity in partnership with HBCUs, and to ensure that these vital institutions of higher learning have the resources and support to continue to thrive for generations to come,” the executive order states.

However, the president seems to have forgotten his campaign promise to cancel student loan debt, which disproportionately impacts Black borrowers more than any other race. The type of student loan debt that Biden promised to cancel for HBCUs, institutional student debt, is different from federal loan forgiveness.

Unlike traditional student debt, institutional student debt is owed to a university by students and is typically used as collateral until the debt is paid off. Therefore, institutional student debt poses a significant threat to those trying to continue their education.

As a result, HBCUs have used COVID-19 emergency funds to cancel student loan debt for their students. Clark Atlanta, Wilberforce, Hampton, Grambling State University, and more than a dozen other HBCUs have cancelled their student debt to give them a leg up in the future.

During his presidential campaign, Biden promised to address the $1.7 trillion student debt crisis, reform student loan programs and forgive federal student loan debt for borrowers from public colleges and universities for families earning less than $125,000 per year, including HBCUs.

However, the president has targeted student loan debt for defrauded students and students with disabilities. Progressive Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren and Chuck Schumer and a bevy of civil rights organizations have kept the pressure on Biden to keep his promise.

More than 36 civil rights organizations have detailed the impact student loan cancellation would have on  Black borrowers. The organizations, which included the NAACP, wrote President Biden stating that Black borrowers typically owe 50% more than Black borrowers upon graduation and four years later owe 100% more.

Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Marcia Fudge doubled down telling Axios earlier this summer it’s clear who student loan debt affects.

“Who has student debt?” Fudge said. “Poor people, Black people, brown people. We’re the people who carry the most debt. And so the system’s already skewed toward us not being creditworthy.”


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