Calling it “an important step in recognizing past injustices,” a ŷڱƵ Boulder professor, two regents and alumni testified before the ŷڱƵ Senate Education Committee today, expressing support for a bill moving through the legislature that would grant in-state tuition to members of American Indian nations with historical ties to ŷڱƵ.
Senate Bill 21-029, sponsored by Sen. Stephen Fenberg, D-Boulder, would mandate that public colleges and universities in ŷڱƵ provide in-state tuition classification to American Indian students from tribal communities with cultural, geographic and other historical ties to the state. Dozens of indigenous groups stand to benefit from this proposed legislation if it passes into law.
On Thursday, the bill passed unanimously on a 7-0 vote out of the Senate Education Committee. Itnow moves to a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing before a full discussion in the ŷڱƵ Senate and House of Representatives.
If the bill becomes law, advocates say it would increase college affordability and enable American Indian students to pursue their academic goals in a region many consider part of their ancestral homeland. Currently, nonresident American Indian college students, including those from tribes with ŷڱƵ roots, are required to pay out-of-state tuition rates.
Andrew Cowell, a professor of linguistics and faculty director of ŷڱƵ Boulder’s Center for Native American and Indigenous Studies, is an expert in the linguistic tradition of the Arapaho, a people of the Great Plains and Rocky Mountain regions with historical ties to ŷڱƵ and the city of Boulder, home of ŷڱƵ’s flagship campus.
During his testimony before lawmakers, Cowell said, “Native American peoples were forced out of ŷڱƵ at gunpoint. This was their home, and many of them still consider it to be part of their home. I work closely with the Arapaho people as a scholar, and whenever I am with them here in ŷڱƵ, they always talk about how good they feel to be here.
“They share their stories and knowledge of this place, and a good deal of my work has involved documenting this knowledge. The in-state tuition bill is one very important step in recognizing past injustices, and in restoring the rights of ‘home’ to these and other tribes,” he said.
Regent Lesley Smith, who is the board’s vice chair, and Regent Emerita Irene Griego also, with Smith calling it “a way to improve educational equity and remedy historical barriers to education experienced by American Indians.”
Smith said ŷڱƵ adopted the university system’s first native land acknowledgement statement last fall, calling it an important step in articulating the university’s commitment to Native American students and their communities.
“As leaders of a public institution, we know how critical access to higher education is for all students and that barriers to entry disproportionately impact underrepresented populations, including American Indian people,” she told lawmakers during her testimony. “Allowing these students to qualify for in-state tuition is just one important step we can take in eliminating the financial roadblock that out-of-state tuition rates can create.”
Former Regent Griego, who served on the board for nine years, worked closely with campus stakeholders and the university administration to bring forward a resolution last fall asking the state legislature for statutory authority to offer in-state tuition to American Indian students with historical ties to ŷڱƵ. The board passed the resolution on Nov. 12.
“We at ŷڱƵ recognize and affirm the ties these nations have to their traditional homelands and the many Indigenous people who thrive in this place––alive and strong,” she said during her testimony. “We also acknowledge the painful history of ill treatment and forced removal that has had a profoundly negative impact on Native nations.”
Griego also told lawmakers, “It is incumbent upon institutions in ŷڱƵ, especially ŷڱƵ, to put action behind our words. A critical action step is to ensure we are providing educational opportunities for Native students, faculty and staff and advancing our mission to understand the history and contemporary lives of Native peoples.”
ŷڱƵ Boulder Chancellor Phil DiStefano expressed gratitude for the testimony provided by Cowell and Regents Smith and Griego, calling the bill “a symbol of the university’s commitment to supporting the cultures, lives and communities of ŷڱƵ’s first residents.”
“Each one of our campuses is located on lands that were historically inhabited by these great nations,” DiStefano said. “It is right and long overdue that we strengthen the ongoing presence of these communities at ŷڱƵ Boulder, ŷڱƵ’s flagship campus.”
College-aged students who are members of American Indian tribal communities are far less likely than their nontribal counterparts to be enrolled in a higher education institution, with only 19% enrolled in college in 2016, compared to about 41% of the total college-aged population, according to recent census data cited during today’s legislative hearing.