Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:more towards merit based
so no more GI Bill?
Any thoughts on what this means for the GI Bill?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The headlines are not sensational enough. Those of you who live in states with senators and representatives need to call them now. This is impoundment, and it’s illegal. This is an actual five-alarm fire, and they need to act like it.
Anonymous wrote:Well they hate education and this is one way to cause universities to collapse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will this threat from the White House change your approach on which schools you'll apply to or attend?
The action seems like a way to try and control universities, and I figured this would happen with him at some point.
https://abcnews.go.com/US/white-house-budget-office-suspends-federal-financial-aid/story?id=118167742
It absolutely will. This is awful policy. This will have negative financial impacts on our country, and even on the families that voted for him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“The Federal Funding Pause Does Not Apply to Student Loans and Pell Grants”
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/28/business/trump-federal-freeze-grants-student-loans.html
The U.S. Department of Education said in a statement on Tuesday morning that the memo sent to government agencies the day before calling for a broad pause on federal spending did not apply to federal student loans or Pell grants. That money will continue to flow, the statement said.
“The temporary pause does not impact assistance received directly by individuals,” said Madison Biedermann, who, according to the department, is currently delegated to perform spokesperson duties. This assistance includes funds like federal direct student loans and Pell grants that the department provides to “individual students,” her statement said.
Part of the confusion, which included many alarmed posts on social media, sprung from the “received directly” portion of the Office of Management and Budget memo. Grants and loans for education can be sent to the school, so students may never receive the money directly.
In a follow-up statement, the department confirmed that no Pell grants or loans would be paused or delayed because of the order. Funding for the federal work-study program, which helps pay for campus jobs, will continue to flow, too.
Trump has promised to close the department of Education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like this doesn’t apply to individual stuff like federal subsidized loans and Pell grants?
The “green new deal” stuff is the craziest. I wouldn’t even know what that might encompass!
The department of education is going to be done away with. That’s gonna get rid of Pell grants and student loans. All theses progressive that allowed more people go to college are out.
Anonymous wrote:Will this threat from the White House change your approach on which schools you'll apply to or attend?
The action seems like a way to try and control universities, and I figured this would happen with him at some point.
https://abcnews.go.com/US/white-house-budget-office-suspends-federal-financial-aid/story?id=118167742
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:“The Federal Funding Pause Does Not Apply to Student Loans and Pell Grants”
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/28/business/trump-federal-freeze-grants-student-loans.html
The U.S. Department of Education said in a statement on Tuesday morning that the memo sent to government agencies the day before calling for a broad pause on federal spending did not apply to federal student loans or Pell grants. That money will continue to flow, the statement said.
“The temporary pause does not impact assistance received directly by individuals,” said Madison Biedermann, who, according to the department, is currently delegated to perform spokesperson duties. This assistance includes funds like federal direct student loans and Pell grants that the department provides to “individual students,” her statement said.
Part of the confusion, which included many alarmed posts on social media, sprung from the “received directly” portion of the Office of Management and Budget memo. Grants and loans for education can be sent to the school, so students may never receive the money directly.
In a follow-up statement, the department confirmed that no Pell grants or loans would be paused or delayed because of the order. Funding for the federal work-study program, which helps pay for campus jobs, will continue to flow, too.
Anonymous wrote:“The Federal Funding Pause Does Not Apply to Student Loans and Pell Grants”
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/28/business/trump-federal-freeze-grants-student-loans.html
The U.S. Department of Education said in a statement on Tuesday morning that the memo sent to government agencies the day before calling for a broad pause on federal spending did not apply to federal student loans or Pell grants. That money will continue to flow, the statement said.
“The temporary pause does not impact assistance received directly by individuals,” said Madison Biedermann, who, according to the department, is currently delegated to perform spokesperson duties. This assistance includes funds like federal direct student loans and Pell grants that the department provides to “individual students,” her statement said.
Part of the confusion, which included many alarmed posts on social media, sprung from the “received directly” portion of the Office of Management and Budget memo. Grants and loans for education can be sent to the school, so students may never receive the money directly.
In a follow-up statement, the department confirmed that no Pell grants or loans would be paused or delayed because of the order. Funding for the federal work-study program, which helps pay for campus jobs, will continue to flow, too.
Anonymous wrote:It looks like this doesn’t apply to individual stuff like federal subsidized loans and Pell grants?
The “green new deal” stuff is the craziest. I wouldn’t even know what that might encompass!
The U.S. Department of Education said in a statement on Tuesday morning that the memo sent to government agencies the day before calling for a broad pause on federal spending did not apply to federal student loans or Pell grants. That money will continue to flow, the statement said.
“The temporary pause does not impact assistance received directly by individuals,” said Madison Biedermann, who, according to the department, is currently delegated to perform spokesperson duties. This assistance includes funds like federal direct student loans and Pell grants that the department provides to “individual students,” her statement said.
Part of the confusion, which included many alarmed posts on social media, sprung from the “received directly” portion of the Office of Management and Budget memo. Grants and loans for education can be sent to the school, so students may never receive the money directly.
In a follow-up statement, the department confirmed that no Pell grants or loans would be paused or delayed because of the order. Funding for the federal work-study program, which helps pay for campus jobs, will continue to flow, too.
Anonymous wrote: