Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Push steps up for $330M for UAPB

- I.C. MURRELL

State legislator­s and a leading alumnus discussed recent steps in their pursuit of reclaiming more than $330 million for the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff under the Second Morrill Act of 1890.

On Wednesday, state Rep. Vivian Flowers, D-Pine Bluff, hosted a town hall meeting at the university’s STEM Conference Center to update how members of the Arkansas Legislativ­e Black Caucus and past presidents of the UAPB National Alumni Associatio­n have worked to bring a resolution to the lack of funding that has plagued the state’s only public historical­ly Black university. The U.S. Department of Education and the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e cited data from the National Center for Education Statistics’ Integrated Postsecond­ary Education Survey that revealed inequitabl­e funding of UAPB has caused a shortfall of $330,935,712 between 1987 and 2020 in comparison to the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le, according to a letter the department secretarie­s wrote to Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders last September.

Though UAPB was founded in 1873, the federal act from 1890 provided that states either establish a second land-grant institutio­n for Black students or prove that admission to the first landgrant schools, establishe­d under the First Morrill Act of 1862 for the purpose of agricultur­al and mechanical studies, was not restricted by race. UA-Fayettevil­le was founded in 1871 under the First Morrill Act.

“The USDA letter was a long time coming,” said Flowers, a candidate for mayor of Pine Bluff.

State Rep. Reginald Murdock, D-Marianna, vice chairman of the Legislativ­e Black Caucus, said there is work that has been, is being and will be done in hopes of securing the missing funding, adding that caucus members were happy just to receive “crumbs” of funding for UAPB from past administra­tions.

“There is acknowledg­ement that something is due, and it’s even law,” Murdock said. “We’ve always had a contingenc­y at the Capitol fighting for that money.”

The Washington Post reported in September that 16 states including Arkansas were found to have underfunde­d the historical­ly Black land-grants by an estimated $12.6 billion combined. The newspaper reported that in 2021, Maryland agreed to a $577 million court settlement with its four historical­ly Black universiti­es, adding that its Black landgrant, the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, received $3,397 more per student than its original land-grant, the University of Maryland, in 2020. Closer to Arkansas, a recent assessment by the federal government revealed that Tennessee State Universi

ty was underfunde­d by $2.1 million, according to reporting by The Tennessean newspaper of Nashville.

In 2022, Tennessee State University was given $250 million by its state government in response to a 2021 audit that showed the school was underfunde­d by up to $544 million between 1957 and 2007, according to reports.

Murdock said Sanders, whose LEARNS Act last year made several changes to K-12 education in Arkansas, has shown interest in addressing the shortfall impacting UAPB. Despite that, legal action to recoup the $330 million is not out of the question, he suggested.

“I truly believe there will have to be a legal arm at some point, because it’s a big number,” he said.

Timothy Pighee, a past president of the National Alumni Associatio­n, said he hand-delivered a letter to a member of Sanders’ staff requesting a meeting with her and other past presidents of the associatio­n.

“We want to see what her thoughts are,” Pighee said. “From that meeting, our group will determine the next steps.”

Students in attendance said they need immediate fixes to poor housing conditions on campus, although Flowers encouraged them to use their voice in the battle to close the funding gap. She said more data are needed to establish a timeline for next steps.

“We are eager and ready to fight with you all,” Student Government Associatio­n President Trenton Wills said. “We want to make sure we’re informed before we go to a fight. We want to fight for future generation­s. We want this university to be here for another 150 years.”

UAPB Chancellor Laurence B. Alexander outlined other needs the missing $330 million could address, including renovated and new residence halls and interior renovation of the Hazzard Gym (where the ROTC is headquarte­red).

“When students are living in better conditions and better housing, when they’re satisfied, when we have a high level of student satisfacti­on with the housing, I am hopeful that would also have a greater impact on their student success and achievemen­t and their success beyond their time here at the university,” Alexander said. “… We need more spaces where students can gather, engage with each other and faculty and staff. There is a great need for addressing facilities and improving facilities.”

The university has broken ground on a planned soccer/track facility and student union in recent years, but those projects have been stuck in early phases and could use some of the missing funding, Alexander said.

“We’ve been value-engineerin­g that project, which means doing things inside that will reduce the cost because we just don’t have the funding to do all the things that were envisioned in the plan and that students had a hand in envisionin­g,” Alexander said when asked about the sports facility. “We will be able to get most of the things now, but [the funding] would bring the project along faster. It would help to bring about a vision and upgrade the campus as a whole so that it looks as good, if not better, than many of the campuses we see across the state.”

 ?? (Pine Bluff Commercial/I.C. Murrell) ?? State Rep. Reginald Murdock, D-Marianna, addresses the Arkansas Legislativ­e Black Caucus’ mission to try to secure more than $330 million in funding for UAPB as former National Alumni Associatio­n President Timothy Pighee listens Wednesday at the STEM Conference Center.
(Pine Bluff Commercial/I.C. Murrell) State Rep. Reginald Murdock, D-Marianna, addresses the Arkansas Legislativ­e Black Caucus’ mission to try to secure more than $330 million in funding for UAPB as former National Alumni Associatio­n President Timothy Pighee listens Wednesday at the STEM Conference Center.

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