Pell Grant: U.S. House and Senate Proposals

The U.S. Congress is still working to finalize funding for fiscal year 2012, despite the fact that the fiscal year began on October 1.  In the meantime Congress has passed a continuing resolution to keep agencies and programs operating at fiscal year 2011 levels until a FY12 budget is passed, which is expected later this year.

Since 2009 Congress has provided new rounds of ad-hoc funding to maintain the increased maximum grant level established in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.  The new grant level continues to be a challenge for Congress. Since 2009 Congress has supported the increase in the grant through various efforts including:

  • Elimination of the guaranteed student loan program (2010)
  • Elimination of the “year-round” Pell Grant (2011)
  • Elimination of the interest-free benefit on subsidized federal loans for graduate students (2011)

In order for Congress to maintain the current maximum Pell Grant ($5,550 per year) it must appropriate $24.3 billion for FY12. This is an increase of $1.3 billion from FY11.

An examination of the House and Senate proposals (i.e. the release of the Labor-HHS-Education appropriation bills) shows the multiple ways each chamber is attempting to reach the fiscal target to maintain the Pell Grant. The different approaches leave room for a compromise in a final omnibus appropriations bill.

U.S. Senate

The U.S. Senate’s proposed appropration bill (S. 1599) would appropriate the full $24.3 billion to maintain the maximum grant in the 2012-13 academic year. The funding is offset by eliminating the interest-free benefit on Subsidized Stafford loans during an undergraduate borrower’s six-month grace period after leaving school. This would create savings of $1 billion which is allocated to support the 2013 Pell Grant and another $3.5 billion for the program between 2017-2021.

U.S. House

The U.S. House’s appropration bill does not add funding to the Pell grant and actually cuts funding when compared to FY11. The caveat being that the bill would still maintain the maximum grant of $5,550 in the 2012-13 academic year. The bill maintains the maximum grant by making significant changes to Pell Grant eligibility rules. These changes include:

  • Reducing he maximum number of semesters a student can receive a Pell Grant from 18 to 12
  • Eliminating eligibility for students that are attending school less than half-time
  • Reducing the amount of a student’s personal earnings that can be excluded from a Pell Grant award calculation
  • Reducing the maximum family income that would automatically qualify a student for the maximum grant from $30,000 to $15,000.
  • Eliminate eligibility for students who quality for less than 10% of the maximum grant.

These changes would lower the appropraiton needed to fund a maximum grant of $5,550 by $3.6 billion in 2012 and about $4 billion each year thereafter because fewer students would be eligible for grants and some students would receive smaller grants.