Alexander Says “Final Step” Of Simplifying Federal Aid Will Make It Easier For 400,000 Tennessee Students To Attend College

  • Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Senate education committee Chairman Lamar Alexander on Tuesday said Congress is ready to take the “final step” of simplifying federal aid will make it easier for 400,000 Tennessee students to attend college.

Senator Alexander made his remarks today at a hearing to explore simplifying how students apply for financial aid and repay their loans, and reducing the jungle of red tape that wastes time and money.

“There are not many things U.S.

senators can do to cause 20 million American families to say, ‘Thank you,’” he said. “After five years of bipartisan work, we are ready to do just that: the FAFSA is simpler and on mobile devices, and Congress is now ready to take the final step to make it easier for those families to apply for federal financial aid and to eliminate $6 billion annually of mistakes that are unfair to taxpayers.

“Last year the Senate passed legislation Senator Murray and I introduced that allows students to answer up to 22 questions on the FAFSA with just one click and will stop requiring students to give the same information to the federal government twice. This final step should also be a bipartisan solution that will reduce the number of questions on the FAFSA from 108 to 15-25 questions.

“In 2015, Senator Bennet and I, along with Senators Booker, Burr, King, and Isakson, introduced bipartisan legislation that would have reduced the number of FAFSA questions to two. But after discussions with college administrators and states, we realized we needed to keep some questions, or states and schools would have to create their own additional forms that students would need to fill out. Over the last four years, we have improved that legislation, and now believe we can move forward with bipartisan legislation that would reduce the FAFSA to 15-25 questions.

“This year, in addition to Senator Murray, Senators Jones, Collins and Bennet are making substantial contributions to make this proposal a reality through legislation.”

Senator Alexander said one of the questions he hears most from students is, “Can you please make it simpler to apply for federal aid?” He went on to tell the stories of Tennesseans: “A volunteer mentor with Tennessee Promise, which is our state’s program that provides two years of free community college,  told me that the 108-question Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA—the form that 20 million families fill out each year to apply for federal student aid—has a ‘chilling effect’ on students and on parents.The former president of Southwest Tennessee Community College in Memphis told me he believes that he loses 1,500 students each semester because the FAFSA is too complicated.”

Tuesday’s hearing was the first hearing this Congress on updating the Higher Education Act. Last month, Senator Alexander outlined his priorities for updating the Higher Education Act at the American Enterprise Institute.

You can read Senator Alexander’s full prepared remarks here.

Student Scene
Lee Student Receives Prestigious 2024 Goldwater Scholarship
Lee Student Receives Prestigious 2024 Goldwater Scholarship
  • 4/17/2024

Lee University's Ethan Ramey, a junior biology major with ecology/environmental emphasis, has received the national Goldwater Scholarship, awarded to college students who intend to pursue research ... more

UTC’s Emma Roy Awarded Boren Scholarship
UTC’s Emma Roy Awarded Boren Scholarship
  • 4/17/2024

University of Tennessee at Chattanooga junior Emma Roy, a secondary education: political science major and Brock Scholar in the UTC Honors College, has been selected for the David L. Boren Scholarship, ... more

St. Andrew’s-Sewanee School Announces New Trustees
  • 4/16/2024

St. Andrew’s-Sewanee School announces three members to the board of trustees following their election on April 5, 2024. Each is elected to serve a three-year term. The new members are Andrew ... more