Miami Herald

FIU student tells Congress he couldn’t finish school without stimulus funds

- BY JIMENA TAVEL jtavel@miamiheral­d.com Jimena Tavel: 786-442-8014, @taveljimen­a

Keith Thornton Jr., a 22-year-old senior at Florida Internatio­nal University, lost his job twice in the past year.

If it hadn’t been for the federal stimulus funds, he wouldn’t be graduating this summer with a degree in recreation and sports management, he told congressio­nal representa­tives at a virtual hearing Wednesday.

Thornton testified before the Higher Education and Workforce Investment Subcommitt­ee, part of the U.S. House of Representa­tives Education and Labor Committee, about his financial insecurity and how the coronaviru­s crisis threatened his education and profession­al developmen­t.

This was the first time the subcommitt­ee, chaired by U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson, the Democrat representi­ng north Miami-Dade and southern Broward, met since the pandemic hit last year.

“Our higher education system is broken,” Wilson said in an interview with the Herald. “It’s too expensive; it’s out of the reach of ordinary students. We knew that these issues were there, but the pandemic peeled back a layer of problems that are affecting higher education across the nation.”

She said the subcommitt­ee will spend the next two months coming up with solutions on these issues. She plans to address college affordabil­ity and student loan forgivenes­s, and increase federal Pell grants and aid for historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es.

She invited Thornton to speak Wednesday because he’s a former scholar of the 5000 Role Models of Excellence Project, a student mentorship program Wilson founded in 1993 when she was a member of the Miami-Dade County School Board.

She knew he had struggled and wanted him to share his perspectiv­e as a student.

Last August, during the first week of the fall semester, Thornton was laid off from his job working in the call center of the Florida Department of Economic Opportunit­y, where he made about $15 per hour, he said. He had just moved to a new apartment and signed a new lease in June. He worried about paying rent.

“Losing that income was a heavy blow,” Thornton said during the hearing. “So it was a great relief when a few weeks later, I received emergency funds from FIU that were made available through the CARES Act. This aid helped me purchase school supplies and keep up with bills.”

He went back to work with the state agency in late fall, and then got laid off again last week.

“I would also urge you to continue to provide support for students who are most in need,” he told the lawmakers. “We represent the future and I, like many of my counterpar­ts, want to use my degree to make an impact.”

Wilson said she loved watching Thornton.

“I was proud as a peacock,” she said, “like a mommy watching her son who has emerged as a young man on his way to greatness.”

Thornton’s is certainly not a unique case. A national survey released Thursday of more than 11,000 full- and part-time college students revealed they are still facing hardships a year into the pandemic.

 ?? Youtube live stream ?? Keith Thornton Jr., a senior at Florida Internatio­nal University, testifies to congressio­nal lawmakers Wednesday.
Youtube live stream Keith Thornton Jr., a senior at Florida Internatio­nal University, testifies to congressio­nal lawmakers Wednesday.

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