The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Morris Brown granted ' Candidacy for Accreditat­ion.'

Agency moves to restore access to students with federal funding.

- By Ty Tagami ty.tagami@ajc.com and Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com

Morris Brown College may have turned a corner after years of financial hardship and plummeting enrollment, as an accreditat­ion agency moves to restore the Atlanta institutio­n’s accesstost­udents with federal funding.

The Virginia-based Transnatio­nal Associatio­n of Christian Colleges and Schools now counts the historical­ly Black college among its roughly 90 members across the country, but the process isn’t over for Morris Brown yet.

The TRACS Accreditat­ion Commission voted to grant Morris Brown “Candidacy for Accreditat­ion” Tuesday morning, the organizati­on’s president, Timothy W. Eaton, told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on. He characteri­zed the decision as a “resurrecti­on” of Morris Brown. “They’re reallyclos­er to accreditat­ion than they’ve ever been in 20 years.”

The status means the college nowhasthe standing toapply to the federal government to enroll students who have government subsidies, such as Pell grants

or federal loans. Students attending a school without accreditat­ion cannot receive federal financial aid.

Historical­ly, Morris Brown attracted first-generation college students from low-income households to its campus near downtown Atlanta. But in 2002, after years of financial issues and mismanagem­ent, the Decatur-based Southern Associatio­n of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges stripped its accreditat­ion.

To keep the college afloat, some administra­tors obtained loans on behalf of students who were unaware that the college had applied for financial aid in their names. One former president pleaded guilty to embezzleme­nt and was sentenced in 2007 to five years’ probation, including a year of home confinemen­t.

Enrollment, which had peaked at 2,700, fell to a few dozen students. The college currently has 53 students, said Kevin James, the college president.

“I’m super excited,” he said. “History was made and this is just the beginning.”

Morris Brown has been working for nearly five years to get to this point. It now has five years to meet all the criteria

for accreditat­ion. In the meantime, the U.S. Department of Education may allow access to federal funding.

Eaton said the college can apply both to enroll students with federal financial aid and to participat­e in direct federal aid programs, perhaps becoming eligible for a stake in the coronaviru­s stimulus.

Assuming the federal government gives swift approval, students enrolled this spring would be eligible to use federal aid at the college for the current semester, he said. The next challenge would be achieving enrollment and fundraisin­g growth.

“This is a big step, particular­ly when you consider the access to the financial resources,” Eaton said, noting that the school has little

in common with the institutio­n that it was a generation ago. “Those people are long gone,” he said.

This is the second HBCU in Georgia that has been thrown a lifeline by Eaton’s organizati­on in recent months. In late October, his agency approved the accreditat­ion applicatio­n of Paine College in Augusta.

Paine and Morris Brown share similar histories. Both were founded in the late 19th century to educate Black students, Morris Brown by the Georgia Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in 1881, and Paine the next year by Methodist church leaders, Black and white, with donations — including pennies from former slaves.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Historical­ly, Morris Brown attracted first-generation college students from low-income households. But in 2002 it was stripped of accreditat­ion.
AJC FILE Historical­ly, Morris Brown attracted first-generation college students from low-income households. But in 2002 it was stripped of accreditat­ion.

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