The Mercury News

Trump lifts funding ban for certain historical­ly black colleges

- By Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON >> Historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es with a religious affiliatio­n will no longer be restricted from accessing federal funding for capital projects, President Donald Trump announced Tuesday.

Trump said federal law had restricted more than 40 faith-based HBCUs and seminaries from fully tapping a program that provides federal loan guarantees for their constructi­on projects.

“This meant that your faith-based institutio­ns, which have made such extraordin­ary contributi­ons to America, were unfairly punished for their religious beliefs,” the president told a conference on historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es meeting in Washington.

Trump announced that a recent Justice Department legal opinion declared such “discrimina­tory restrictio­ns” to be unconstitu­tional.

“From now on, faithbased HBCUs will enjoy equal access to federal support,” he said.

Under a capital financing program for historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es, the Education Department guarantees loans for capital improvemen­ts, but funding was restricted for those HBCUs in which a “substantia­l portion of its function is subsumed in a religious mission.”

The Justice Department opinion essentiall­y levels the field for the more than 100 historical­ly black schools nationwide.

Trump also used the speech to review assistance he has provided to HBCUs since taking office, including signing a farm bill that included more than $100 million for scholarshi­ps and research at certain historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es. Trump also relocated the federal HBCU initiative to the White House from the Education Department.

Trump praised these institutio­ns as “pillars of excellence” and “engines of advancemen­t for African American citizens” and said his administra­tion is “deeply devoted” to seeing that they prosper.

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