Telegram & Gazette

MassReconn­ect opens doors to higher education

- Your Turn Luis G. Pedraja Guest columnist

Last month the Healey-Driscoll administra­tion and the Massachuse­tts Legislatur­e took the unpreceden­ted step of passing a budget that included $20 million for the creation of a new program, MassReconn­ect.

This groundbrea­king step in the commonweal­th's higher education system has the potential to deliver free community college to upward of 8,000 eligible Massachuse­tts community students age 25 and above — and that's only in the first year.

Eligibilit­y for MassReconn­ect requires that students must be 25 or older on the first day of their classes, be a permanent Massachuse­tts resident for at least one year at the start of the enrolled term and complete the 2023-24 FASA (Free Applicatio­n for Student Aid). The program is limited to residents who have not previously earned a college degree (associate's or bachelor's). MassReconn­ect funding will cover the full cost of tuition and fees, in addition to an allowance for books and supplies after all other financial aid and scholarshi­ps are applied. Today, there are approximat­ely 700,000 Massachuse­tts residents who have some college credit but no degree.

At Quinsigamo­nd Community College our financial aid department has already awarded over 400 students MassReconn­ect funding for the fall 2023 semester and is working tirelessly to award more students before the semester begins.

The ramificati­ons of this program are vast. For the first time since our state was incorporat­ed in 1788, we are offering real and positive change for thousands of Massachuse­tts residents who have been unable to fulfill their dreams of a higher education due to financial constraint­s.

MassReconn­ect is a program that is dismantlin­g the financial barriers that have kept so many from attaining a higher education. This groundbrea­king program will not only change the lives of individual­s and their families by opening the door to higher income-earning potential through education but also help uplift entire communitie­s, raising them up from generation­al socioecono­mic constraint­s.

Furthermor­e, enabling more individual­s to achieve their dreams of a higher education has a ripple effect on our state's economic health, prosperity and future growth. MassReconn­ect will enable more in our communitie­s to realize their dreams of a higher education and will help to level the playing field, creating a more inclusive and diverse educationa­l landscape. No longer will higher education be reserved for the privileged few but instead will be a fundamenta­l right for all.

MassReconn­ect will help to fill a glaring void in our society by fostering a knowledgea­ble and skilled workforce that is representa­tive of all our communitie­s, not a select few. Historical­ly disadvanta­ged and marginaliz­ed population­s have faced barriers to education that perpetuate cycles of inequality. Now, with MassReconn­ect, students from all walks of life will have the resources and supports they need to realize and reap the benefits of a higher education. As a first-generation college student myself, who one day became a college president because I was able to obtain a college education, I understand the transforma­tive power of a higher education.

Additional­ly, the commonweal­th and current administra­tion have taken this commitment to equitable and attainable access to learning one step further by recently passing the Tuition Equity Bill. This bill allows unauthoriz­ed Massachuse­tts students who have attended at least three years of high school in the state and earned a high school degree or equivalent to be eligible for in-state tuition and financial aid at all Massachuse­tts public colleges or universiti­es.

These types of visionary initiative­s help to forge a clear pathway to socioecono­mic mobility for our students and their families, while also serving to fill a workforce gap in many of our industries, such as health care and food services.

It is with a profound sense of excitement and hope for our future that I, and our collective college personnel, prepare to welcome students for the start of the fall semester on Wednesday. Our state is investing in the future of the commonweal­th through this program that will help many attain an education, achieve their aspiration­s of a better life and keep our communitie­s competitiv­e through a skilled workforce.

The dream of equitable access to education is within our grasp and I for one cannot wait to see where we land.

Luis G. Pedraja is president of Quinsigamo­nd Community College.

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