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HR 3709 115th Congress House Education Appropriations Education of the disadvantaged Education programs funding Elementary and secondary education Higher education Minority education Student aid and college costs

America's College Promise Act of 2017

Introduced: September 7, 2017 Introduced by: Scott, Robert C. "Bobby" Democratic · Virginia See on congress.gov
This bill died when the 115th Congress ended
It never became law before the 115th Congress (2017–2018) adjourned, and bills don't carry over to the next Congress. It would have to be reintroduced. You can still save it for reference, but it won't receive updates.
 Everywhere this bill has been 2 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Sep 7, 2017
Referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.
Sep 7, 2017
Introduced in House
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 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

America's College Promise Act of 2017

This bill requires the Department of Education (ED) to award grants to states and Indian tribes to waive tuition and fees at community colleges. To receive a grant, states and Indian tribes must agree to waive tuition and fees at all their community colleges and for all eligible students.

An eligible student is a student who: (1) qualifies for resident tuition, (2) enrolls in the college and attends at least half-time, (3) maintains satisfactory academic progress, and (4) enrolls in an academic program with credits that are fully transferable to any public institution of higher education in the state or enrolls in a training program that leads to credentials in an in-demand industry.

The bill appropriates $1.5 billion in FY2018, an increasing annual amount through FY2026, and $15.7 billion for FY2027 and each succeeding fiscal year for grants under this community college program.

This bill also requires ED to award grants to four-year historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) and other minority-serving institutions (MSIs) to waive or reduce tuition and fees for up to 60 credits for low-income students.

HBCUs and MSIs that participate must: (1) enroll a student body that contains at least 35% low-income students; (2) maintain or adopt reforms and practices to improve completion rates and student outcomes; (3) set performance goals; and (4) execute an articulation agreement with community colleges, if accepting transfer students.

It appropriates $61 million for FY2018, an increasing annual amount through FY2026, and $1.6 billion for FY2027 and each succeeding fiscal year for grants under this HBCU/MSI program.

What's happening now September 7, 2017

Referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

 Related & companion bills 4
 Bill text 1 version

Source documents hosted by congress.gov.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1
Cite this page click to expand
APA
U.S. Congress. (2026). H.R. 3709: America's College Promise Act of 2017. 115th Congress. Open America. https://openamerica.io/bill/115-HR-3709/
MLA
"H.R. 3709: America's College Promise Act of 2017." 115th Congress, 2026, Open America, https://openamerica.io/bill/115-HR-3709/.
Bluebook (legal)
H.R. 3709, 115th Cong. (2026), https://openamerica.io/bill/115-HR-3709/.
Markdown link
[H.R. 3709: America's College Promise Act of 2017](https://openamerica.io/bill/115-HR-3709/)
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