Current:Home > ContactVirginia House repeals eligibility restrictions to veteran tuition benefits -Edge Finance Strategies
Virginia House repeals eligibility restrictions to veteran tuition benefits
View
Date:2025-04-18 15:02:05
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Virginia’s House of Delegates voted unanimously Friday to restore free college tuition at state schools for families of veterans who were killed or seriously disabled while on active duty.
The 92-0 vote would repeal restrictions to the Virginia Military Survivors and Dependents Education Program that had been placed in the state’s annual budget earlier this year.
Military families complained about the restrictions after the budget passed. Gov. Glenn Youngkin and legislative leaders have since been trying to appease those dismayed by the change.
The program’s popularity has exploded and become increasingly costly for Virginia’s state colleges. Over the past five years, enrollment in the program increased from 1,385 students to 6,107. The collective cost has increased from $12 million to $65 million.
To rein in those costs, the budget deal passed last month restricted eligibility to associate and undergraduate degrees, required participants to apply for other forms of financial aid, and tightened residency requirements.
Friday’s bill that passed the House eliminates those tighter restrictions. Meanwhile, a task force created by Youngkin is studying the issue and expected to recommend permanent changes to be taken up in next year’s legislative session to make the program financially viable.
The House bill now goes to the Senate, which is expected to take up the issue on Monday. Its future in the Senate is unclear. The chair of the Senate’s Finance Committee, Democrat L. Louise Lucas, has introduced legislation to delay implementation of the restrictions for a year and commits $45 million of surplus budget funds to cover the program’s cost — in addition to $20 million that had already been allocated — while a legislative commission studies the issue.
On Friday, Youngkin urged the Senate to pass the House bill.
“If the Senate Democrat Leadership does not support a repeal of the language, they are holding our veterans, first responders, and their families, hostage. It is time to do the right thing,” Youngkin said in a written statement.
The program also provides benefits to families of first responders who are killed or seriously disabled while on the job.
veryGood! (1467)
Related
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Iowa receiver Kaleb Brown arrested for operating a vehicle under the influence, fake license
- Video captures shocking moment when worker comes face-to-face with black bear at Tennessee park
- $2 million bail set for man charged with trying to drown 2 children at Connecticut beach
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- US Olympic track and field trials: Winners, losers and heartbreak through four days
- It’s Official! Girlfriend Collective Has the Most Stylish Workout Clothes We’ve Ever Seen
- Wolves attack and seriously injure woman who went jogging in French zoo
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Gigi Hadid Gifted Taylor Swift Custom Cat Ring With Nod to Travis Kelce
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- What to know about Team USA bringing AC units to Paris Olympics
- Sentencing awaits for former Arizona grad student convicted of killing professor
- Morgan Wallen Hit in the Face With Fan’s Thong During Concert
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- South Texas needs rain. Tropical Storm Alberto didn’t deliver enough.
- Four minor earthquakes registered in California Monday morning, including 1 in Los Angeles
- Disputed verdict draws both sides back to court in New Hampshire youth detention center abuse case
Recommendation
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Diane von Furstenberg on documentary, 'biggest gift' from mom, an Auschwitz survivor
Surgeons perform kidney transplant with patient awake during procedure
Things to know about dangerous rip currents and how swimmers caught in one can escape
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
She needed an abortion. In post-Roe America, it took 21 people and two states to help her.
Former Georgia officials say they’re teaming up to defend the legitimacy of elections
Alec Baldwin attorneys argue damage to gun during testing was unacceptable destruction of evidence