San Antonio Express-News

$236M in relief is college bound

At least half may help area students hurt by pandemic

- By Danya Perez

San Antonio-area colleges and universiti­es expect to receive nearly $236 million from the latest round of federal COVID-19 relief funds, and if previous rules apply, at least half of it is destined for direct aid to students.

The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act signed by President Joe Biden last week includes $40 billion for the nation’s colleges and universiti­es through the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund.

The largest amounts would go to the Alamo Colleges District, at $99.6 million; the University of Texas at San Antonio, with $86.5 million; and Texas A&M University-san Antonio, with $19.1 million, under preliminar­y estimates released by the office of U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-austin, whose district includes part of Bexar County.

“This further investment in U.S. higher education is most welcome,” UTSA President Taylor Eighmy said in a statement.

“We know how critical the student emergency financial aid components are for our students and will work to get those dollars to our students as soon as possible.”

The money is meant to supplement coronaviru­s-related expenses for public and private higher education institutio­ns. But at least half the aid must go to “students whose lives have been disrupted, many of whom are facing financial challenges and struggling to make ends meet,”

according to U.S. Education Department guidelines for previous rounds of aid.

At Alamo Colleges, the funds will be distribute­d among the system’s five community colleges: San Antonio, St. Philip’s, Palo Alto, Northwest Vista and Northeast Lakeview.

“Out of what we are getting, about $48 million of that is going to go directly to student emergency aid,” said Mike Flores, the college district’s chancellor. “Our students already are on the margins. They are supporting themselves and often others, and they are living paycheck to paycheck.”

The grants will be distribute­d to students who already receive financial aid to pay for college and to those who apply for an emergency grant, Flores said. The students don’t have to use the new aid only for college-related expenses, he added, as they are intended to supplement any income lost because of the pandemic.

The funds have yet to be allocated to the institutio­ns, which also expect to receive new guidelines for the latest round of aid. But officials have preliminar­y plans based on the requiremen­ts of previous relief bills.

The University of the Incarnate Word expects to receive nearly $15 million, which university officials also expect will be distribute­d according to previous guidelines and processes.

“Each round has had different sets of rules, and we of course follow those,” said Darrell L. Haydon, UIW’S chief financial officer. “In the next round, we are expecting to have a little over $7 million to distribute to students over the next year or so, and that’s great news for our students.”

Haydon said the latest round might also go into institutio­nalizing some pandemic-related enhancemen­ts that have proved useful.

“I think there’s an opportunit­y to expand our availabili­ty to our students,” he said. “A university is more than a 9 to 5 type of operation. … So we are looking into creating a single-point-contact student service center that would allow us to better serve our students.”

In previous allocation­s of federal relief, colleges and universiti­es have been allowed to use the other half of the funds to supplement lost revenue, meet payroll and cover pandemic-related expenses, such as distance learning technology and protective equipment.

“These are needs that have arisen due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the financial pressure it has put on institutio­ns across the nation,” Jennifer Lloyd, director of communicat­ions at St. Mary’s University, said in a statement. “Lower enrollment and additional expenses to prepare and support students at universiti­es like St. Mary’s have further compounded these challenges, all the result of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

St. Mary’s is expecting to receive about $8.2 million. Other expected allocation­s include about $6 million for Our Lady of the Lake University and about $4.2 million for Trinity University.

 ?? Staff file photo ?? Bernice De Luna flips her tassel near Texas A&M University­san Antonio President Cynthia Tenientema­tson during a curbside commenceme­nt last May.
Staff file photo Bernice De Luna flips her tassel near Texas A&M University­san Antonio President Cynthia Tenientema­tson during a curbside commenceme­nt last May.
 ?? Matthew Busch / Contributo­r file photo ?? Christophe­r Romero hugs his wife, Joann, at a San Antonio College graduation parade last November.
Matthew Busch / Contributo­r file photo Christophe­r Romero hugs his wife, Joann, at a San Antonio College graduation parade last November.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States