Good-Paying Jobs Bill Seeks to Support Thriving Colleges

Good-Paying Jobs Bill Seeks to Support Thriving Colleges

Summary
Colorado lawmakers are considering a bill to promote colleges and trade schools, helping students facing unique challenges complete degrees and certificates and secure good-paying jobs.
House Bill 1006 would allow the Colorado Department of Higher Education to designate schools as “thriving.”
Yesenia Silva Estrada, vice president of planning and chief of staff at Colorado Mountain College, said the new designations would go to institutions with a proven track record of helping students of color and other underrepresented populations achieve education beyond high school.
“They could receive designation as a rural ‘thriving’ institution,” Estrada explained. “Or they’re helping adult learners, they’re helping veterans, they’re helping first-generation students, students from low-income backgrounds.”
The measure was drafted after the Trump administration announced it was ending $350 million in funding for Minority-Serving Institutions, a federal designation the administration claims is “discriminatory” and creates racial quotas. The bill’s sponsors said colleges with official thriving designations would be a sign that campuses welcome all students.
If passed, a committee of business, college, and state leaders would establish criteria for thriving colleges and trade schools, and the state agency would post the designations each year based on measurable data.
Estrada added that Colorado lawmakers would receive an annual report that includes lessons learned by schools on how to best support students.
“If we did have this recognition framework, it would allow us to quickly identify those institutions that are being successful and share best practices,” Estrada emphasized.
Supporters of the measure are also aiming to shrink a persistent gap in degree attainment for Colorado’s K-12 students. Estrada noted that the new designations would signal to students enrolling in degree or credential programs that it is a good investment. She stressed there are currently more jobs in Colorado than qualified workers.
“A certain level of postsecondary education is needed, especially in the state of Colorado, to be able to achieve a better wage outcome and a better career,” Estrada underscored.
