LETTER: Congress' cuts will put American dream, your education in danger
This is a busy time for you. But while you are choosing classes and making the decisions that will help you build a good life for yourself, the Congressional majority is working to make drastic cuts in education -- in your student loans, in national service and even in your scholarships.
And the cuts will jeopardize the future you and your generation are working toward.
I want you to know that I oppose these cuts. I will do everything in my power to right them and to see to it that the dream of higher education remains real for all Americans.
I will do this not only by defending the opportunities of those of you who are already in college, but by opening the doors further to make sure that even greater numbers of deserving Americans have the chance to stand where you stand today.
For the first time in a long time, leaders from both parties are resolved that we must balance the federal budget.
From the day I took office, I've been committed to this goal -- to getting rid of the budget deficit that quadrupled our national debt in the 12 years before I came to Washington.
So far we have made great progress. In three years, we have cut the deficit nearly in half, from $290 billion to $160 billion.
Now we are ready to eliminate the deficit entirely. On this issue, the Congressional majority and I see eye to eye.
But just how we get rid of the deficit is another matter. The majority in Congress wants to balance the budget in seven years, and do it while giving an unnecessarily large tax cut.
But in order to do these things, the Congressional majority would make enormous cuts in education.
My balanced budget plan would take more years than Congress' plan to eliminate the deficit, but that's a small price to pay to keep your scholarships, your student loans and national service safe and well. It would also preserve our ability to protect the environment and the integrity of Medicare for our older citizens.
Balancing the budget is about more than numbers. It's about our values and our future.
Education has always been the currency of the American Dream. When I was your age, it was assumed -- based on our long history -- that each generation would have a better life than the preceding one.
More than anything else, a good education is the way we pass the vision on to those who come after us.
The facts speak for themselves. Earnings for those with no post-secondary education have fallen substantially in the last 15 years.
The only people for whom earnings have increased steadily are people exactly like you -- those Americans with more education.
Every year of higher education increases your earnings by six to 12 percent.
Those years also mean a stronger overall economy and richer lives for those who have them.
Balancing the budget will be good for our economy and your future if it's done right. But simply balancing the budget won't do us much good in the long term if your generation does not have the education it needs to meet the challenges of the next century.
Just think over what the Congressional majority's plan, if it went through, would do to you, your classmates and any of the one out of two college students who receives federal aid. It would:
* Raise the cost of student loans by $10 billion over seven years by charging you interest on your loan while you are in school. This would increase the cost of a college education by as much as $3,100 for undergraduates and $9,400 for graduate students.
* Deny up to 360,000 low-income students desperately needed Pell Grants in 1996.
* Shut down Americorps, our national service initiative, which gives thousands of young people the chance to earn and save money for college while serving their communities.
By contrast, my balanced budget plan builds on the national consensus that we must help people help themselves, through the power of education. It eliminates both of our deficits: our budget deficit and our education deficit.
My plan cuts wasteful spending by more than $1 trillion, but it also increases investments in education by $40 billion over the next seven years.
Think over how my balanced budget plan would help guarantee your future and all the hard work you're about to put into it. It will:
* Increase funding for Pell Grants by $3.4 billion. Almost one million more students would benefit from the scholarships. And we would raise the top award to $3,128 by the year 2002.
* Expand Americorps to let even more young Americans serve their communities and go to college.
* Protect our direct-lending program, which makes student loans more affordable, with more repayment options, and saves taxpayers, parents and students billions of dollars.
Your generation has its own battles to wage. You face the choice of doing something right and difficult -- or something easy and wrong.
You deserve the nation's support. And your future success will likely repay our common investment.
I do not accept the arguments of those who condemn irresponsibilty in young Americans and then seek to deny the nation's helping hand to the millions of you who are doing the right things.
I hope you'll support my efforts to protect education and balance the budget. The fight for education is the fight for your future.
In my life -- and in the lives of countless Americans -- education has meant the difference between the impossible and the possible. It should be true in your lives too. With your help, we'll keep it that way.
William J. Clinton
President
United States of America
Washington, D.C.
This item appeared in the Opinion section of the September 29, 1995 issue.
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