For a second time, the Trump administration is repurposing funding for minority-serving institutions.
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The U.S. Department of Education announced Thursday that it’s reallocating funds for minority-serving institutions to the Strengthening Institutions Program, a capacity-building grant for low-resourced colleges that serve high numbers of low-income students.
The grant competition will support colleges’ efforts related to “workforce readiness,” “responsible use of artificial intelligence” and the development of short-term programs.
The investment in the Strengthening Institutions Program for fiscal year 2026—at the expense of MSIs—comes as no surprise to MSI advocates, who have been predicting the move for months. In March, the Education Department came out with an eligibility application for grant programs serving low-resourced institutions that only named SIP and made no mention of Hispanic-serving institutions, predominantly Black institutions or other MSI programs.
The department called MSIs “unlawful” and “unconstitutional” in its recent press release about SIP’s one-time expansion. The Trump administration has long taken issue with MSIs’ enrollment thresholds for particular racial or ethnic groups, whereas SIP has no race-related criteria.
This is the second time the administration has shifted discretionary funds away from MSIs to other grantees; last year it directed the money to historically Black colleges and universities and tribal colleges.
“The Strengthening Institutions Program and its accompanying grant awards will equip eligible colleges and universities with the resources they need to prepare students for real-world, in-demand, high-wage careers,” U.S. Department of Labor assistant secretary for employment and training Henry Mack said in the release.
