[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 182 (Wednesday, November 30, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H7936-H7937]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COST OF COLLEGE SMOTHERING OPPORTUNITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Connecticut (Mr. Courtney) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COURTNEY. Mr. Speaker, it has now been 2 months since the Occupy
Wall Street movement spread all across this country; and despite
attempts to marginalize it, parody it, sometimes even suppress it, the
fact is that one message has come through loud and clear, particularly
from young Americans who have participated in this grassroots movement
across the country, which is that the spiraling cost of college is
smothering opportunity for millions of young Americans all across
America.
Yesterday the Secretary of Education, Arnie Duncan, presented a
speech in Nevada which I think starkly presents the challenge which we
face as a Nation. Today, the average student loan debt for graduating
students is $25,000. That's the average. There are, again, millions of
students who are graduating with six-figure debt. And in an economy
like the one they're facing today, this is really an obstacle which
will probably burden them for the rest of their lives. And as we are
seeing in polls, the cost of college is discouraging many younger
Americans, high school-age Americans from even considering the
possibility of pursuing a higher education degree.
First of all, let's be very clear here. The value of higher education
is still, despite some critics, indisputable. If you look at the
unemployment rate today, 9 percent across the board in terms of our
country, the fact of the matter is that those who have pursued high
school and above have much lower rates of unemployment today than those
who have been unable to reach those training levels and education
levels.
Nationally, today the graduation rate of the U.S. has now fallen to
12th internationally. Back in the 1980s, the College Board, which is
the organization which tracks graduation rates across the globe,
determined we were number one in the world in terms of college
graduation rates. Yet today, in 2011, we are 12th. If anybody thinks
that is a situation which bodes well for our ability to compete
internationally going into the future, then, frankly, they're not
paying attention in terms of where the high-value jobs of the future
are. They are, in fact, in hard sciences; they are, in fact, in areas
of critical workforce needs which, as baby boomers retire in growing
numbers across this country, we must have if we
[[Page H7937]]
are going to continue to be a great Nation.
Now, let's look at what is happening here in Washington. I think one
of the reasons why young people are going into the streets of this
country is the fact that we have a Congress which is not only out of
touch in terms of listening and responding to this, in fact, they want
to take us backwards.
When I first came to Congress in 2007, a new Democratic majority
moved swiftly to pass the College Cost Reduction Act, which was an
effort to try to boost the Pell Grant program, which is the workhorse
of higher education affordability, a program which basically had been
level-funded for 6 prior years despite the fact that higher education
costs had gone up 40 percent. We passed the College Cost Reduction Act
which infused new funding into the Pell Grant program. We cut the
interest rates for the Stafford student loan program from 6.4 percent
to 3.2 percent, and we paid for every single penny of those
expenditures by cutting the bank subsidies which were basically sucking
Federal dollars away from families and students who need that critical
help.
Last year we passed the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act,
again with a Democratic majority, which provides for a cap in terms of
loan repayments of 15 percent of your discretionary income and excuses
loan repayments after 25 years under the Stafford student loan program.
{time} 1050
I was pleased that President Obama, again, just a month or so ago,
acted to increase the benefit of that program by limiting the
discretionary income payments to 10 percent of income and lowering the
forgiveness date to 20 years, from 25 years. This is an administration
which gets it. This is an administration that understands middle class
families with children who want to improve themselves and compete in
their futures need that kind of assistance.
What did this Republican Congress do? We had a Ryan budget last April
which gutted and butchered the Pell Grant program and would take us
back to 2008 levels. So, for example, in Connecticut, where I come
from, the University of Connecticut would have seen its Pell Grant
revenue from 2008, which was about $8 million going into the University
of Connecticut, it would have been cut from where it is today, which is
$12 million of annual Pell Grant revenue--a $4 million cut to the
University of Connecticut. And the grant level for students, the
maximum award, would have been cut from $4,500 a year down to roughly
about $3,000 a year. That is closing the doors of opportunity to
millions of Americans. That's what the Ryan budget values and that's
what its vision was at a time when, again, our country is in crisis in
terms of needing skilled, qualified workers to deal with the future
challenge.
The choice is clear. For those who care about spiraling education
costs, the Democratic agenda is the one that is on your side.
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