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HBCUs Are Still The Vanguard

July 15, 2026

The article examines the inequalities embedded in America's back-to-school season, where some students return with financial security and support while others face debt, food insecurity, and systemic disadvantages. The author argues that Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) serve as the "vanguard" of higher education by cultivating talent where mainstream institutions have historically excluded Black students, yet these schools are consistently underfunded despite their outsized impact. Recent changes to federal student loan policies, including the end of the Biden-era SAVE plan and restrictions on graduate borrowing, will disproportionately burden Black students who already carry heavier debt loads.

Who is affected

  • Black college students (particularly those at HBCUs)
  • HBCU institutions themselves
  • Students with debt, food insecurity, and transportation challenges
  • Federal student loan borrowers currently in repayment
  • Current undergraduate students who will face narrower repayment options upon graduation
  • Families dealing with Parent PLUS loan limits
  • Graduate and professional students facing new borrowing caps
  • Future borrowers affected by the phase-out of Graduate PLUS loans
  • Communities supported by the 136,000+ jobs generated by HBCUs

What action is being taken

  • The Biden-era SAVE plan has ended
  • Millions of borrowers are being moved into other repayment plans
  • Graduate PLUS loans are being phased out for new borrowers
  • Stores are marketing back-to-school products and sales

Why it matters

  • This matters because it exposes how educational opportunity in America continues to be "rationed" along economic and racial lines. HBCUs serve as critical economic engines and leadership factories, enrolling only 9% of Black college students but producing 16% of bachelor's degrees earned by Black students, yet they operate with insufficient funding relative to their impact. The dismantling of more favorable student loan policies particularly affects Black students who already carry disproportionate debt burdens, threatening to widen existing educational and economic inequalities. The contradiction between celebrating HBCUs symbolically while underfunding them practically undermines the institutions most responsible for providing access to students from under-resourced communities.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint