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Reform needed as public losing faith in universities, says Foxx

Republican house committee chair sets sights on passing comprehensive higher-education legislation as she returns to position held under Trump regime

Published on
March 13, 2023
Last updated
March 13, 2023
Source: United States Government

Representative Virginia Foxx听planned听to leverage the decline in the public perception of higher education to usher in a new era of stronger accountability for US colleges and universities as she reprised her role as chairwoman of the house education committee.

It was听鈥渆xactly the right time鈥 to reauthorise the Higher Education Act of 1965,听Dr Foxx听told in an interview. The last reauthorisation was in 2008, and the law is supposed to be renewed every five years.听Dr Foxx and other lawmakers have tried over the years to pass comprehensive higher-education legislation, only for those efforts to fail, and observers听have been sceptical that meaningful higher-education bills can pass both chambers during this session of Congress.

Still,听Dr Foxx was hopeful that she could get a bill across the finish line before the end of next year, even though Democrats control both the Senate and the White House. That was because, she said, the Covid-19 pandemic exposed gaps in the higher-education system and fuelled听听in positive听听about higher education.

鈥淭he reason I think we can do it this year is听that higher ed has never been held in such low esteem as it is now,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n the past, we had members who were a little shy about doing it, because the presidents of their universities would come to them and say 鈥楴o, no, no, you can鈥檛 bother us鈥, and they would be intimidated by them. But I don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 going to be the case this year.鈥

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In her first听听as chair, Dr听Foxx has听听one hearing on the 鈥渃rises鈥 in American education, filed numerous听听for information with the Department of Education and called attention to the cost and value of a college degree. She has also shown a willingness to bring the culture wars that have been waged in schools and on college campuses into the hearing room. The committee鈥檚 first markup session听on 8 March 鈥 views are studied in detail at such sessions 鈥 focused on bills that would prevent transgender students from playing on school or college teams that matched their gender identity and would create a Parents鈥 Bill of Rights with regard to children鈥檚 education.

鈥淭hose are not related to issues of cost or quality or access or innovative practices in higher education,鈥 said Jon Fansmith, senior vice-president for government relations at the American Council on Education. 鈥淭hose are very divisive culture war issues that are being raised.鈥

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Nevertheless, Mr Fansmith said it听was good for higher education that听Dr Foxx had returned as chair. 鈥淪he clearly cares deeply about a lot of issues in higher education,鈥 he said.

Lobbyists and higher education watchers familiar with the committee鈥檚 work acknowledged that听Dr Foxx听probably听wanted to pass substantive legislation but cast doubt on her ability to move a reauthorisation through Congress, pointing to the need for bipartisan buy-in and the politics of the Republican conference, in which members appear more interested in oversight and messaging bills 鈥 bills in which the message sent out is more important than the likelihood of them being passed. The committee鈥檚 oversight role and听Dr Foxx鈥檚 megaphone as chair will probably have the most impact on the national conversation about higher education, they said.

鈥淭he narrative about the value and cost of higher education is something that we care a lot about,鈥 said Craig Lindwarm, vice-president for governmental affairs at the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities. 鈥淲e are very concerned about the narrative and want to make sure that we鈥檙e articulating that value proposition appropriately.鈥

Reauthorising the Higher Education Act is one of听Dr Foxx鈥檚 top priorities, along with reauthorising the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA), which is aimed at helping jobseekers access employment, education and training.听Dr Foxx was a key leader in 2014 when the act was last updated.

鈥淪he cares about higher education policy and wants to do more substantive legislating,鈥 Mr Lindwarm said, adding that听Dr Foxx also had to serve the political goals of the caucus as committee chair. 鈥淚s HEA reauthorisation really a priority for the caucus?鈥 he asked.听

A familiar face

The 79-year-old North Carolina Republican has said that she is the only one in Congress with the legislative and higher education experience to enact certain reforms. First elected to the House in 2004, she has developed a reputation as a staunch conservative. In the higher-education realm, she is a proponent of for-profit institutions and fewer regulations,听and a fierce opponent of the College Transparency Act, which would have given students and families more information about college programmes and outcomes by requiring colleges and universities to report certain data.

Before serving in Congress,听Dr Foxx was a sociology instructor at Appalachian State University and president of Mayland Community College. She鈥檚 a long-time member of the house education committee, which she听听during the Trump administration.

鈥淒r Foxx has an extraordinary knowledge of federal higher-education policy,鈥 said David Baime, senior vice-president for governmental relations at the American Association of Community Colleges (AACC). 鈥淲e know how strongly committed she is to workforce Pell, and we are counting on Congress to enact legislation along these lines.鈥

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Dr Foxx has already听听legislation this session to expand the Pell Grant to programmes that run for at least eight weeks. The policy initiative known as short-term Pell or workforce Pell has been听听for several higher-education groups, including the AACC, for several years, but whether for-profit institutions would be included in the expansion has been a sticking point. Dr Foxx wants for-profits included.

Julie Peller, executive director of Higher Learning Advocates, a bipartisan non-profit that works to improve outcomes for students, said听she was听optimistic for Dr Foxx鈥檚 tenure as chair, given her focus on community college students and better connecting the world of higher education and the workforce.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 where we see a lot of need for today鈥檚 students,鈥 she said.

Passing education-related legislation will require Dr Foxx and other Republicans to work with Vermont senator Bernie Sanders and the Biden administration. Mr Sanders, an independent who caucuses with Democrats, chairs the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions.

On Mr Sanders, Dr Foxx said she was hoping that 鈥減eople who are to the far right and far left come together鈥 and find common ground.

Mr Sanders hasn鈥檛 said much about his higher-education priorities yet, though he has been a vocal advocate for free community colleges. The committee鈥檚 top Republican, Louisiana senator Bill Cassidy, did talk briefly about reauthorising the Higher Education Act during his remarks at the committee鈥檚 first meeting.

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On the Biden administration, Dr Foxx said she had talked to education secretary Miguel Cardona many times but diverging philosophical positions听made it difficult to find common ground with officials.

鈥淚 get along with them fine, but their worldview is so different from the worldview of the majority of the people in this country that it鈥檚 really difficult to understand where they鈥檙e coming from,鈥 she said.

Higher-education accountability

When Dr Foxx last led the committee, she听听ending some loan-repayment plans and, as part of a bill that would have reauthorised the HEA, added tying federal funding to outcomes for some institutions and rolling back regulations governing for-profit colleges. That bill passed the committee but never received a floor vote.

Since Dr Foxx last held the committee鈥檚 gavel, the national conversation about higher education has shifted, in part because of the pandemic. Higher education has also become a听divisive issue as voters听听and conservative lawmakers听听to remake state universities.

鈥淭he public is much more vocal now than it has been in the past,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e seeing trustees who are aware of the problems in the colleges and universities, and that鈥檚 a huge deal. Trustees are now speaking up and forming groups, particularly on speech issues, but also on accountability issues. I am very, very pleased with the responses you鈥檙e seeing in the general public.鈥

Dr Foxx said buy-in from the entire Republican conference听would be key to passing comprehensive higher-education legislation. She also hoped to get Democrats on board, but she was not optimistic.

鈥淔or some reason, Democrats don鈥檛 seem to want accountability, and that is a major focus for us,鈥 Dr Foxx said.

For Dr Foxx, holding colleges and universities accountable means requiring institutions to give students and parents more information up front about the cost of attendance, graduation rates, job prospects and earnings. 鈥淧eople can vote with their feet,鈥 she said.

A new accountability system听could also have a provision for risk-sharing, in which colleges and universities would be on the hook for loans that students could not pay back, she said.

鈥淚f they鈥檙e admitting students who can鈥檛 make it, who don鈥檛 pay back their loans, we think the school should have to pay some of that money back,鈥 she said.

Higher-education associations opposed the risk-sharing concept when she proposed it in 2017.

Other topics

On the push at听听against diversity, equity and inclusion efforts at public universities, Dr Foxx said she听wanted colleges to have freedom to decide whom they hire, but that听did听not mean public colleges should require statements from prospective employees about their commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion.

鈥淕overnment has no business dictating that kind of thing, and there really should not be a penalty for people holding a different point of view听from those that听others hold,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 all about academic freedom, but we see that the left believes in academic freedom when it goes one way.鈥

More broadly, Dr Foxx said she听wanted听the country鈥檚 education systems to be seen as the best in the world.

鈥淔rankly, right now, that鈥檚 eroding,鈥 she said. 鈥淧eople are not looking to the United States as much as they have in the past for having the best education institutions in the world, and that鈥檚 troubling to me.鈥

This is an edited version of a story that originally appeared on

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