Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Murphy fires air ball on Giannis claim

- Ricardo Torres

Determinin­g which students get financial aid can be a challenge and when the decision-making process involves race and ethnicity, it can become even more complicate­d.

Assembly Bill 554 would remove race-based programs or requiremen­ts for higher education and replace them with a program that applies to economical­ly disadvanta­ged students.

In November, state Rep. Dave Murphy, R-Greenville, used an interestin­g example to argue the change from racebased to need-based aid is necessary.

“Bucks star Giannis Antetokoun­mpo signed a three-year contract for $186 million. He and his family, being African American, could receive benefits under affirmative action,” Murphy said on the Assembly floor in November.

Murphy went on to say some minorities could still receive benefits if the bill is passed and signed into law.

“Let’s face it, disadvanta­ged African Americans would certainly qualify under this program, as well they should,” Murphy said. “And that’s exactly what we would want to happen.”

First and foremost, Antetokoun­mpo was born in Greece and is of Nigerian descent. That said, we’re isolating Murphy’s main point one on one.

Could Antetokoun­mpo’s children receive benefits under affirmative action?

Funding for minority students

When we reached out to Murphy’s office for evidence to support his claim, aide Steve Knudson responded with a list of categories and programs, including graduate student financial aid, the Ben R. Lawton Minority Undergradu­ate Grant Program and the Minority Teacher Loan program. Knudson said in an email that each program “does not statutoril­y require recipients to demonstrat­e financial need.”

Since the bill focuses on financial aid, and that was the evidence provided, we are focusing on that and not other areas where affirmative action might be applied,

such as hiring.

Connie Hutchinson, executive secretary of the Wisconsin Higher Education Aids Board, told us she wished Murphy reached out to her “to discuss this before making that statement.”

The Wisconsin Higher Education Aids Board, is a 10-member part-time independen­t policy-making board appointed by the governor.

“Students are required to show ‘need’ in order to receive grants and/or loans from the state through the Higher Educationa­l Aids Board,” Hutchinson said in an email. “The only programs that do not require need are the Academic and Technical Excellence Scholarshi­ps. These are awarded to the students with the highest GPA of their graduating class.”

Taylor Odle, an assistant professor of educationa­l policy studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, agreed.

“Some of these programs are focused on racially minoritize­d students,” Odle said. “The hallmark is the Minority Undergradu­ate Retention Grant and it gives students $2,500 per year. What is not mentioned, I think, in a lot of dialogue, is that they not only have to qualify as a racially minoritize­d student, but they also have to qualify on the basis of financial need.”

He also said citing Antetokoun­mpo as an example of why race-based criteria should be removed is a stretch: “The average person in Wisconsin doesn’t make $186 million every three years. (Antetokoun­mpo) does not represent the majority of Black, Latinx, Asian American, Native American Wisconsini­tes. That potential fringe case doesn’t negate the really wide realities of racial inequality that we have in Wisconsin.”

Let’s look a little more closely at the three programs Murphy’s office specifically cited.

Lawton grant program

In his email, Knudson cited an applicant must belong to one of several minority groups as a basis for qualification, without noting other requiremen­ts such as the student must be at least a sophomore, have submitted the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) each year and show what is termed an Expected Family Contributi­on below $15,000 as well as general financial need.

The UW-System’s administra­tive policy on the Lawton grant states:

“The program will be need-based, need being calculated by the prevailing federal methodolog­y, except that an institutio­n may set aside up to 10 percent of its allocation to be awarded to students based on other need criteria developed by the institutio­n. Financial aid officers are strongly encouraged to be sensitive to the special needs of minority students and to carefully examine the student’s available resources in developing a financial aid package.”

So, by citing this program, Murphy shot an air ball.

Graduate student financial aid

On the graduate student financial aid, Murphy’s office wasn’t specific as to which program it was referencin­g, except to say state statute requires “the Board of Regents to establish a grant program for minority and disadvanta­ged graduate students enrolled in the UW System.”

“This statute does not specify or take into account student financial need. Under the statute an individual is eligible for this aid if they are a minority or disadvanta­ged graduate student,” Knudson said, adding neither term is defined.

While the state statute does exist, there are multiple programs at UWMadison that advise colleges to consider a students’ socio-economic status.

So, here Murphy falls short as well.

Minority teacher loan program

Finally, the Minority Teacher Loan program requires a student to work after graduation in a school with at least 40% minority students. Students can then have the loan forgiven, up to $10,000 per academic year and up to $30,000 total, after they have completed working at the school.

But there’s more to qualify for the loan. To receive the loan, students must also be a Wisconsin resident, enrolled in the UW-System, have an overall 3.0 grade point average, and “be enrolled in a program of study leading to a teacher’s license in a discipline identified as a teacher shortage area for the state of Wisconsin by the federal Department of Education.”

On this one, Murphy is closer – in that being a member of a minority group is required, but it is one of multiple other factors.

Our ruling

Murphy claimed “Bucks star Giannis Antetokoun­mpo signed a three-year contract for $186 million. He and his family, being African American, could receive benefits under affirmative action.”

The bill in question is focused on financial aid programs, and the ones Murphy’s office cited include financial need as a central qualifying element. Or, in the case of the Minority Teacher Loan program, includes other factors beyond race to qualify. Our definition of Mostly False is “the statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression.”

That’s our rating on this one.

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