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UGA to receive millions in coronavirus stimulus money

It looks like the University of Georgia is in line for more than $23 million in federal stimulus funding: it’s part of a COVID 19 stimulus package that will send money to other colleges and universities around the state.

From Maureen Downey, AJC…

The federal government Thursday announced more than $6.28 billion will flow to U.S. colleges and universities to distribute cash grants to low-income college students experiencing hardships as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

The grants are coming out of the nearly $31 billion Congress allocated to the U.S. Department of Education for students, K-12 schools, and higher education institutions under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.

More than $300 million is bound for public and private campuses and technical colleges throughout Georgia, half of which must go to emergency student aid. Students can use the grants to cover course materials and technology as well as food, housing, health care, and childcare. Colleges and universities will determine which students will receive the cash grants. Allocations to campuses were determined largely on the number of full-time students who qualify for Pell Grants, which are based on family income.

While $300 million appears a significant sum, Jennifer Lee, higher education policy analyst for the Georgia Budget & Policy Institute, said, “That money is going to help, but it is going to go fast.”

These new federal dollars are not enough to avoid the financial cliff that could be awaiting colleges from a possible recession and deep funding cuts. “Anyone in the University System is not looking at that pot of money as a big free-for-all to just spend,” said Lee. “They are going to be conservative in spending as there is going to be tough decision-making ahead as they anticipate the state budget.”

Georgia State, for instance, is getting $45 million from the CARES Act, half of which underwrites the student grants. That leaves the 50,000-student university with $22.5 million to help pay staff and plug holes in an annual budget of more than a billion dollars, said Lee.

The question for every school in Georgia: How big are those holes going to be?

Georgia colleges have to be cautious as it’s unclear whether enrollments will fall if students from financially fragile households can’t afford to return next year, said Lee, adding, “Even in the best of times, little things can knock low-income students off their path.”

“What’s best for students is at the center of every decision we make,” said U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos in a statement. “That’s why we prioritized getting funding out the door quickly to college students who need it most. We don’t want unmet financial needs due to the coronavirus to derail their learning.”

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