Miami Herald

Senate Republican­s advance redesign of Bright Futures bill

Florida lawmakers for decades have tinkered with the state’s popular Bright Futures Program. This year, Senate Republican­s want to tie scholarshi­p amounts to degrees that lead to jobs.

- BY ANA CEBALLOS AND JEFFREY S. SOLOCHEK aceballos@miamiheral­d.com jsolochek@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

Following a rewrite and uproar from dozens of students and parents, Senate Republican­s on

Tuesday advanced legislatio­n that could reduce amounts covered under the state’s popular Bright Futures college scholarshi­p program.

The largely unpopular bill was pulled from the Senate Education Committee agenda a week ago to give its sponsor more time to adjust some of the more contentiou­s items.

Many of the key policy ideas in Senate Bill 86 were left untouched. But a new, longer version now requires state education officials to put together a

list of degrees that don’t lead directly to jobs, and that list is tied to Bright Futures scholarshi­p amounts.

Students seeking degrees that are on the list would get smaller scholarshi­p amounts. The goal is to “redesign the program to connect the world of work and the world of education,” said Sen. Dennis Baxley, the sponsor of the bill.

“I am saying have a pathway plan that connects between these two worlds or you are not going to have the full package,” Baxley said.

Baxley, R-Ocala, called Bright Futures — a program that rewards high school graduates based on merit and high academic achievemen­ts — an “entitlemen­t program.”

His bill also includes language that would take away scholarshi­p funds for any credits that students earned through Advanced Placement and related programs they took in high school — something the state has encouraged them to do over several years.

“We are not going to pay for that same course again,” said Baxley.

At the same time that Baxley proposes scaling back Bright Futures awards, he also is sponsoring legislatio­n (SB 1728) that would allow out-ofstate students to pay instate tuition rates at public universiti­es if their grandparen­ts live in Florida.

A BIG IMPACT

Bright Futures currently benefits roughly 112,000 Florida students. Dozens of those Bright Futures recipients, their parents, university student body presidents and even some college professors, filled a room at the Leon County Civic Center on Tuesday to speak against the reworked bill.

Each received 30 seconds to make their case, and most characteri­zed the proposal as one that would make college less affordable and that cast uncertaint­y on their career paths.

Some Florida high school seniors also expressed concern about a provision in the bill that would take away scholarshi­p funds for college credits earned through Advanced Placement and related programs they took in high school. Baxley said the reduction would only apply if the credit is accepted by the institutio­n and applies to a career program requiremen­t, or to general education courses.

“Why am I being punished for following the advice given to me by the state?” said Grant Stacey, a high school senior from Port Charlotte.

Most of the concerns, however, revolved around students not being able to choose their desired major.

As lawmakers said during debate on the bill, it is impossible for anyone to know which degrees could be impacted, but they expressed their concerns about the idea of doing it.

“It is not our job to penalize them for ... majoring in something that the system says does not warrant them a job,” said Senate Education Committee Chairman Shevrin Jones, D-West Park.

Jones also noted that Baxley’s sociology degree from Florida State University didn’t lead him to a job in the field.

“You are a funeral home director and no one told you that this is what you should do and this is the direction you should go in. No, because no one interfered with what God wanted us to do,” Jones said.

Baxley later earned an associate degree in funeral services at Miami-Dade College.

Democrats were not alone in their hesitation over the proposal.

Sen. Jennifer Bradley, a Fleming Island Republican, also was concerned about creating such a list. She voted in favor of the measure but said she believes parents should be the ones having conversati­ons with their kids about their passions and career goals.

“I just disagree with the idea that the state gets to decide that dream,” said Bradley, a mother of three.

Sen. Travis Hutson,

R-St. Augustine, raised concerns about people who make up their own majors with the school’s approval, and how they would be impacted. Baxley did not have answers for what would happen under that scenario.

“I agree with the intent that you have,” Hutson told Baxley, “and I hope you will work with the process to get it in a lot better posture.”

In a letter sent to Senate Education Committee members on Monday, Baxley said his hope is that “the research will show that all, or most degrees our institutio­ns of higher learning are offering DO lead to jobs.”

“But if there are degrees out there that don’t, I believe we have a moral obligation to let the student know,” he said.

Baxley sent the letter after his bill was suddenly pulled from the committee agenda last week amid growing opposition from student groups. Other changes in the bill included pushing back the start date of the new scholarshi­p rules one year, until 2023-24.

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