Bills continue successful Promise Program and expand HINET Program to
help with tuition, basic needs
Representative Justin Woodson, Chair of the House Lower and
Higher Education Committee, along with other Representatives, Senators, UH
staff and students discuss the bills passed this year to support community
college students.
Honolulu, Hawaiʻi – In recent
years, paying for a college education has become too expensive for many people,
and students who are at an economic disadvantage are disproportionately
affected. To offset costs for tuition and basic needs, state lawmakers have
passed two bills appropriating more than $2.3 million in state funds to help our
young people achieve their dream of a college degree.
The
first bill is SB316
SD2 HD2 – Hawaiʻi
Community College Promise Program.
·
This
bill provides $1.4 million ($700,000 for each of the next two fiscal years) to
cover community college tuition for eligible students once all other federal
aid and public and private scholarships are exhausted.
·
The
bill also requires the University of Hawaiʻi to collect data on how well
the Promise Program directly increases the likelihood that a recipient attends
college and completes a degree program.
Rep.
Justin H. Woodson (Kahului, Pu‘unēnē, Old Sand Hills, Maui Lani), Chair of the
House Lower & Higher Education Committee, said the Hawaii Promise Program has helped more than
1,500 community college students since it began in 2017.
"The
Legislature wants to ensure that as much of these funds as possible go to
students who may not otherwise have attended college, and that the scholarship
is effective in helping students complete a degree program," said Rep.
Woodson. "If you want to invest in yourself, then we at the Legislature
want to invest in you."
The
second bill is SB50
SD2 HD1 – Hawai'i Nutrition
Employment and Training Program (HINET).
·
This
bill appropriates $910,000 ($455,000 for each of the next two fiscal years) to
continue the HINET program and hire seven full-time instructional and student
support positions.
·
HINET
is a workforce and education training program offered to students who receive
or are eligible for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits and are
enrolled at least part-time at a UH community college in an approved program.
·
HINET
helps students cover the cost of food, transportation, books, and necessary
tools.
·
HINET
staff work with students one-on-one to address their needs and goals, and match
them with training.
Sen. Donna Mercado Kim (Kapalama, ‘Alewa, Kalihi Valley, Ft.
Shafter, Moanalua Gardens & Valley, portions of Halawa and ‘Aiea) said the HINET program
began in 2015 and is a partnership between the state Department of Human
Services and the University of Hawaiʻi's community
colleges.
"These
bills attest to the Legislature's focus on education and the future by not only
helping our students with their tuition, but by helping them not have to worry
if they are going to be able to feed themselves, if they are going to be able
to afford their textbooks, and how they are going to get to campus on time,"
said Kim, Chair of the Senate Higher Education Committee. " These two
measures work together to bring support the whole student so they can be
successful in achieving their educational dreams."
Bernadette Garrett, who will soon graduate from Windward
Community College, said the HINET program's support has changed her life.
"I'm so thankful. This program helped me be able to
choose education over just working. To pay for my textbooks and other
needs," Garrett said. "The HINET program gave me the motivation and
confidence to ensure that as a first-generation Native Hawaiian college student
I can continue on the path that my kupuna, my mother, set out for me."
Representative
Woodson said statistics from the HINET Program found that 72 percent of the participants
returned for their next academic year, compared to 54 percent of all UH
community college students.
"About
58 percent of the participants are Native Hawaiian," said Woodson. "As of February, the program has
had 543 enrollees and more than 200 University of Hawaiʻi Community College students
are receiving assistance. About 140 enrollees completed a two-year program and
are employed or transferred to a four-year campus."
Both bills now
advance to Governor David Ige for approval or veto.
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