House passes legislation making RI Promise program permanent

 

STATE HOUSE – The House of Representatives today approved legislation (2021-H 5224) sponsored by House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi to permanently enact the Rhode Island Promise program, which provides up to two years of free tuition for eligible Rhode Islanders at Community College of Rhode Island.

The program is currently set to expire with the class entering CCRI in September 2021. Speaker Shekarchi’s bill would remove the sunset provision altogether, making the program permanent.

“The Promise program is an excellent example of how we can prioritize affordable college options for all Rhode Islanders. The best investment we can make to help individuals achieve their goals is to give them the access to a college education, which is the pathway to a brighter future,” said Speaker Shekarchi (D-Dist. 23, Warwick).

The program was proposed by Gov. Gina Raimondo in 2017, and is open only to students graduating high school who begin CCRI the following fall. To keep the scholarship, they must be full-time students who qualify for in-state tuition, maintain at least a 2.5 GPA, and remain on track to graduate on time. As a “last-dollar” scholarship program, it funds only the remaining costs of tuition and mandatory student fees after Pell Grants and other sources of scholarship funding are factored in.

When originally proposed, Rhode Island Promise had a sunset provision that would have made it expire with the class that graduated high school in 2020 and entered CCRI that fall. The General Assembly included an expansion in the 2021 budget, extending to the program for students who are currently high school seniors. With the passage of Speaker Shekarchi’s legislation, the program would be available to students in perpetuity.  It currently costs approximately $7 million per year.

The legislation is cosponsored by Representatives Grace Diaz, Gregg M. Amore, Jacquelyn Baginski, Majority Leader Christopher R. Blazejewski, Majority Whip Katherine Kazarian, and Representatives Brandon C. Potter, Leonela Felix, Nathan W. Biah, and Jose F. Batista.

The measure now moves to the Senate, where companion legislation (2021-S 0079) was introduced by Senate President Dominick Ruggerio and was passed by the full Senate on April 13, 2021.

 

-30-

For an electronic version of this and all press releases published by the Legislative Press and Public Information Bureau, please visit our website at www.rilegislature.gov/pressrelease.

 

Follow us on social media!

 

Stormy Daniels is back on the stand today as former President Trump's criminal hush money trial resumes. On Tuesday, the adult film star gave a lot of information about her alleged sexual encounter with Trump, which he denies. A jury is trying to decide whether Trump is guilty of falsifying business records to cover up payments made to Daniels to keep her silent about the alleged affair just prior to the 2016 election.        At least three people are dead after severe storms hit the South. Tennessee was slammed with at least four tornadoes on Wednesday, and two deaths were reported, one by a large tornado and one by a falling tree. One person was killed by damaging winds in North Carolina when a tree fell on a car near Charlotte. Tornadoes were also reported in Georgia and Alabama.       Tall security fences now surround the site where pro-Palestinian protesters camped out at DC's George Washington University for two weeks. The barriers, similar to those used to protect the U.S. Capitol after the 2021 riot, are blocking every entrance to University Yard. The Yard and surrounding streets are now completely clean, free of tents and trash left behind by protesters forced from their encampment by DC police early Wednesday.       The U.S. has hit pause on a large shipment of offensive weapons for Israel over concerns about a large-scale military operation in Rafah in southern Gaza. U.S. officials say the move is to stave off a full Israeli invasion of Rafah and to prevent civilian casualties as ceasefire negotiations continue with partners in Cairo, Egypt. Israel has threatened a major assault on Rafah to defeat thousands of Hamas fighters, but the city is also a refuge for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled combat in the north.        More Americans are filing for first time unemployment benefits. The Labor Department reports receiving 231-thousand initial requests in the week ending May 4th. That's more than the 214-thousand most analysts had been expecting and an increase from the previous week's 208-thousand. It's also the highest number reported since last August.        This summer's box office is expected to come up short of pre-pandemic numbers. Disney's "Planet of the Apes" is tracking for a domestic opening weekend of between 55-and-60-million. Paramount's "IF" is looking at around 40 million. Analysts believe the summer movie season will exceed three-billion-dollars in ticket sales, but just barely. Before Covid, the summer box office consistently topped more than four-billion.