Baltimore Sun Sunday

Bowie student named to Biden’s HBCU advisory board

- By McKenna Oxenden

A 20-year-old junior at Bowie State University student was appointed by President Joe Biden to the President’s Board of Advisors on Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es, the White House announced Thursday.

Paige Blake, a Prince George’s County native, is majoring in biology is on a pre-med track. She plans to attend medical school and study neurology to help others with spina bifida and other neurologic­al conditions, according to a biography on the White House website. When Blake was 4, she was diagnosed with sacral agenesis, a form of spina bifida.

Blake uses her personal experience to help advocate for others, according to her bio, by organizing donation drives with her Girl Scout troop to send medical supplies to countries overseas and working with the Congressio­nal Black Caucus and former President Barack Obama’s White House Initiative on African American

Excellence to advocate for disabled students.

She also is working with the University System of Maryland Student Council as the director of student affairs, where she advocates for students to ensure that present and future college students in the state of Maryland will have positive and equal opportunit­ies.

Blake is among the nine men and nine women Biden is appointing to the advisory board on historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es.

Several HBCU presidents, the president of United Airlines, actor Taraji P. Henson, NBA player Chris Paul and the first Black woman to become administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency are among Biden’s selections.

The board will advance the goal of the HBCU Initiative, establishe­d by the Carter administra­tion, to increase the capacity of HBCUs to provide the highest-quality education to its students and continue serving as engines of opportunit­y.

The White House said the administra­tion has committed $5.8 billion in support to these historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es through a combinatio­n of pandemic relief funding, grants and forgiving capital improvemen­t debt.

Javaune Adams-Gaston, the president of Norfolk State University, Virginia’s largest HBCU, was also named to the board. Adams-Gaston previously worked at the University of Maryland in various positions, including psychologi­st, associate dean in academic affairs, assistant athletic director, equity administra­tor and graduate faculty member.

In 2021, Biden appointed Tony Allen and Glenda Glover to serve as the board’s chair and vice chair, respective­ly. In February, he appointed Dietra Trent as the initiative’s director.

HBCUs in Maryland in addition to Bowie State are Morgan State University and Coppin State University in Baltimore and University of Maryland Eastern Shore in Princess Anne in Somerset County.

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