Press "Enter" to skip to content

Posts published in “Day: February 13, 2015”

Planting ideas (colleges)

trahant MARK
TRAHANT

 
Austerity

Congress has recognized the importance and the value of tribal colleges. A Senate resolution sets Feb. 8 as the “National Tribal Colleges and Universities Week.”

There are 32 fully accredited tribal colleges and universities on some 75 campuses across the country, reaching thousands of students, delivering higher education for a fraction of the cost of other public institutions.

“All across America we have teachers helping students in some of the poorest, most remote corners of our nation. We have students who are committed to persevering, have been raised with the cultural strength of their tribe, and are determined to shine brighter to make this world a better place,” said U.S. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-North Dakota, and sponsor of the resolution. “In North Dakota, I’ve been awestruck by the commitment I’ve seen from our educators and staff at all five of our tribal colleges to engaging with our Native kids – to showing them that they can achieve higher and grow stronger both personally and professionally.”

But when it comes to public policy, tribal colleges do not get the resources required.

A few weeks ago, the Atlantic published a critical report about tribal colleges and called them a “poor return on more than $100 million a year in federal money.” And, a top line of a hundred million sounds like a lot of money. The primary complaint was that the schools’ graduation rates are lower than other institutions.

But here is the rub: The same report acknowledged how much less is being spent on Native students. “Congress sets tribal college funding and is authorized by federal law to give schools a maximum of $8,000 per student. But in reality the schools get $5,850 per student on average. And that funding can be used only for Native American students; nearly a fifth of those enrolled don’t identify as Native,” wrote Sarah Butrymowicz for The Atlantic. “Howard University, a historically black college, by comparison averages more than $20,000 per student from the federal government.”

And that’s just the beginning. A report by the Century Foundation estimates the total cost for a community college averages $10,242 per student.

But The Atlantic piece seemed to blame tribal colleges themselves for inadequate resources — and a performance metric based only on graduation rates.

Fortunately there is another way to look at this issue. The Montana Legislature is considering legislation that would boost funding non-Indian students who attend tribal colleges on a per student basis. A bill by Rep. Susan Webber, D-Browning, would match the amount of funding that state community colleges receive on a per capita basis. Under current state law tribal colleges — seven based in Montana — receive about half as much per student as community colleges. Non-Indian students make up nearly a third of the student body at Montana’s tribal colleges. As Blackfeet Community College President Billie Jo Kipp put it: “Compared to what Dawson Community College gets, we get $3,000. They get $6,740. We provide similar services, we provide similar—if not more—training programs, workforce development programs, to non-Natives as well.”

Tribal colleges remain, in my mind, an unfair bargain. A bargain because they deliver higher education at a much lower cost per student. And an unfair bargain because they should not have to do that. There should be the resources available to get the job done.

Tribal colleges serve another critical role. Let me explain. If you look at the economy of a local community, pick the town, you’ll find that there are often four pillars of activity that create jobs. These are: government, health care, higher education and private sector. We know that government (tribal and federal) plays a huge role in any reservation economy. It’s the same with Indian health (now Indian Country’s single largest employer). In communities with strong tribal colleges, that becomes a third leg for economic development because there’s an infrastructure surrounding a campus that creates good gigs ranging from professors to maintenance workers. The fourth leg, the private sector, is usually the weakest link for a lot of reasons. (more…)

On the front pages

news

Here’s what public affairs news made the front page of newspapers in the Northwest today, excluding local crime, features and sports stories. (Newspaper names contracted with location)

Six same-sex marraige licenes in Idaho invalid (Boise Statesman, Nampa Press Tribune, Moscow News)
More Idaho drone companies plan their move (Boise Statesman)
Legislature reviews open meeting penalties (Boise Statesman)
Whitman farm cleared for pot planting (Lewiston Tribune)
WA justices agree with WSU golf on water (Moscow News)
12th avenue gets development attention (Nampa Press Tribune)
Bill would pull Idaho from common core group (Nampa Press Tribune)
Concealed weapons bills hit legislature (TF Times News)

State officials urge Kitzhaber resignation (Portland Oregonian, Eugene Register Guard, Salem Statesman Journal, Medford Tribune, KF Register Guard, Pendleton E Oregonian)
Property manager and money vanish (Eugene Register Guard)
Salem warns about owl attacking joggers (KF Herald & News)
Medford area eagle killed by poison (Medford Tribune)
Senators moving on timber payment bill (Medford Tribune)
Fed budget could cut conservation research (Pendleton E Oregonian)

School districts review vaccination policy (Bremerton Sun)
State roads bill hits $570m (Seattle Times, Vancouver Columbian, Everett Herald)
Campbell named city manager (Longview News)
Chorus of calls for Kitzhaber resignation (Vancouver Columbian, Longview News)
Legislature sees push for gas tax increase (Tacoma News Tribune, Yakima Herald Republic, Olympian)
Big new Amazon fulfillman center at DePont (Tacoma News Tribune, Olympian)
Bill would limit lawsuit awards in records cases (Olympian)
Another measles case on the peninsula (Port Angeles News)
North Idaho waters near flooding (Spokane Spokesman)
Building book seen in Kootenai apartments (Spokane Spokesman)
Tacoma graduation rate exceeds the state's (Tacoma News Tribune)
Leaders in Washougal oppose oil terminal (Vancouver Columbian)