The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Morehouse School of Medicine students to each get $6,300

Financial aid to be used for educationr­elated expenses.

- By Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com

Students at an Atlanta medical school will soon get a big gift a few days before Christmas.

Morehouse School of Medicine is planning to give each of its students $6,300 to pay for various education-related expenses. The school hopes to get the money to its 754 students by Dec. 15.

The school’s president, Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice, wrote an email to students Wednesday outlining how the students can use the money.

“I am happy to announce that Morehouse School of Medicine will provide a financial gift of $6,300 to assist each of our currently enrolled, degree-seeking students with additional academic, financial, and mental health support costs such as childcare, food, transporta­tion, housing, and healthcare needs,” the email said.

The money comes from the federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, which passed through Congress and signed into law by then President Donald Trump in March 2020. The massive $2.2 trillion act was designed to help Americans and businesses financiall­y through the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The legislatio­n initially included $14 billion for U.S. colleges and students, through the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund, or HEERF. Federal officials added $21.2 billion to HEERF in January. Another $39.6 billion was added in March through the American Rescue Plan. Morehouse School of Medicine received $56.4 million through that plan.

Morehouse School of Medicine, a private institutio­n located near Mercedes Benz Stadium in downtown Atlanta, is one of a handful of medical schools nationwide created to serve Black students. About 90% of its students receive some type of need-based financial aid, which Rice wrote “identifies exceptiona­l need of our student population.”

Another historical­ly Black medical school, Meharry Medical College, located in Nashville, last month used CARES Act funds to give $10,000 to each of its 956 students.

Colleges and local government­s have occasional­ly found themselves scrambling to find ways to spend CARES Act funds. The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported last year how some Atlanta-area county government­s raced to use the funds by Dec. 31, after which the federal government required unused dollars to be sent back to the treasury. DeKalb County officials, for example, had allocated only about $5 million of the $15 million it planned to provide small businesses.

Several Georgia colleges and universiti­es this past summer used federal coronaviru­s relief funds to clear student account balances from the previous school year, citing the financial strain many students faced.

Jay Greene, an education policy expert at the Heritage Foundation, said via email: “The fact that Morehouse (School of Medicine) is simply forwarding its CARES funding to its students suggests that the federal government didn’t need to provide it and other universiti­es with such large subsidies.”

He later added: “I think (the school) made a better use of taxpayer dollars by giving it directly to the intended beneficiar­ies than the less productive uses chosen by other institutio­ns, even if it would have been more appropriat­e for taxpayers not to have provided those funds at all.”

The money comes from the federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, which passed through Congress and signed into law by then President Donald Trump in March 2020.

 ?? BOB ANDRES/ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Morehouse School of Medicine President and Dean Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice sent an email to students Wednesday outlining how the students can use the funds.
BOB ANDRES/ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM Morehouse School of Medicine President and Dean Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice sent an email to students Wednesday outlining how the students can use the funds.

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