American Indian Higher Education Consortium, 121 Oronoco Street, Alexandria, VA 22314

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Media Contact:

Kathy Aplan, Communication & PR Associate

(571) 733-8042 - phone

kaplan@aihec.org

The American Indian Higher Education Consortium Celebrates National Tribal College and University Week on Capitol Hill


Alexandria, VA – Feb 2, 2024 – The American Indian Higher Education Consortium (AIHEC) is celebrating the week of February 5th, 2024, as National Tribal College Week with visits to U.S. legislative leaders who have Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs) in their states.


Each year AIHEC hosts their member TCUs with Capitol Hill visits for the opportunity to meet with their respective lawmakers face-to-face and share information about their college’s successes, challenges, and needs. In support of these efforts, Congress has declared the week of February 5th, 2024, as National Tribal College Week.


“Holding face-to-face meetings with the Senators and Representatives whose states are home to Tribal colleges or universities is important,” says AIHEC Vice-President of Congressional and Federal Relations Ahniwake Rose, “This gives our TCUs the opportunity to thank lawmakers for their support and let them know what they need in order to offer the best possible higher education to their students.”


Some of the areas of concern that the TCUs would like to address are the pending 2024 budget cuts that would stress these already underfunded institutions, affecting their ability to provide much needed services to students; equity in federal funding and resources in the land-grant system; appropriation requests; Farm Bill reauthorization priorities; and Higher Education Act reauthorization priorities.


“Our nation’s accredited TCUs strive to meet their students where they are and have made tremendous headway in the last 50 years,” stated AIHEC Interim President and CEO John Phillips, “These place-based, community institutions serve in some of the most remote and impoverished locations in the country and are a beacon of hope for many of their students. We want lawmakers to know that when our students succeed, our communities, states, and our nation succeed.”



The TCU presidents, their staff, and students convening in Washington, DC will also meet with representatives from the Biden Administration, attend a listening session with the Bureau of Indian Education on their strategic plan, and meet with U.S. Department of Agriculture leadership.

###


American Indian Higher Education Consortium (AIHEC) provides a support network to the nation's accredited Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs) and developing institutions and works to influence public policy on American Indian and Alaska Native higher education issues through advocacy, research, and programmatic initiatives; promotes and strengthens Indigenous languages, cultures, communities, lands, and tribal nations; and through its unique position, serves member institutions and emerging TCUs.

TCU Presidents, staff, and students at last year's 2023 AIHEC Legislative Summit

Photo courtesy American Indian Higher Education Consortium

American Indian Higher Education Consortium
www.aihec.org | (703) 838-0400
Facebook  Instagram