Making Higher Education Affordable
In March 2010, President Obama signed into law the Student Aid and
Fiscal Responsibility Act, which invests in financial aid by ending
sweetheart deals to big banks and loan companies. It infuses $36 billion
into the financially strapped Pell grant program, benefiting 8 million
students. It also improves the Income Based Repayment program,
benefiting 1 million borrowers by capping repayment at no more than ten
percent of their salary and allowing for loan forgiveness after 20
years. The bill also cut $60 billion in subsidies for banks and lenders
to pay for college affordability measures. Student PIRG lobbying and
organizing over the past several years was critical to the passage of
this historic law.
Global Warming Solutions
The Student PIRGs are educating the country about the solutions we
have to global warming and building support for local, state and
national policies that will put those solutions into practice. In Spring
2010, we mobilized over 30,000 students and community members to call
for clean, renewable energy and an end to our dependence on oil and
coal. We held events on and off campus to educate thousands of people,
resulting in more than 100 news stories about our work.
New Voters Project
Launched more than 25 years ago, the Student PIRGs’ New Voters
Project has helped to register more than 700,000 voters and make more
than a million personalized voting reminders since 2004, making it the
nation’s largest nonpartisan grassroots mobilization effort targeting
young voters. During that period, young voter turnout has consistently
increased, rising from 36% in 2000 to more than 52% in 2008.
The 2008 election saw young voter turnout surge by at least 2.2
million votes over 2004 levels. Students involved with the New Voters
Project played a big role in the impressive turnout of students in this
historic election. On 100 campuses in 17 states, the Student PIRGs' New
Voters Project combined old-fashioned pavement pounding with
cutting-edge technology to reach young voters.
The CARD Act
In February 2010, the “Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and
Disclosure (CARD) Act” went into effect. The Student PIRGs helped pass
this strong legislation, which ends some of the worst abuses of the
credit card industry, including some which are often targeted at college
students. The CARD Act eliminates excessive penalty fees, unfair
billing practices, and unjustified and retroactive interest charges. It
also restricts and requires greater transparency for marketing
targeted exclusively at college campuses or consumers under the age of
21. Despite the credit card industry's lobbying to defeat the bill, the
Senate and the House both passed it with overwhelming bipartisan
majorities.
Making Health Care Work
In March 2010, President Obama signed the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act into law. This law takes unprecedented steps to
lower costs for families and small businesses and prohibits insurers
from using pre-existing conditions, errors on forms, and lifetime or
yearly caps to drop patient coverage or price it out of reach. It also
helps young adults – a highly uninsured demographic - by allowing them
to stay on their parents’ coverage until age 26.
Truth About Credit
Since 2007, the Student PIRGs and USPIRG have been running the Truth
About Credit campaign to expose dangerous credit card practices and
clean them up. We organized “FEESA” educational tables on colleges
nationwide, where we acted like credit card marketers but instead
promoted principles for responsible credit card marketing on campus.
In 2008, we also surveyed over 2,000 students and released a subsequent
report, “The Campus Credit Card Trap,” which garnered nationwide media
coverage.
Student Debt Alert
Our Student Debt Alert campaign raises awareness about the growing
problem of student debt and calls for solutions. Through the campaign,
over five thousand students posted their photos and stories on the
Student Debt Yearbook, to illustrate to decision makers the importance
of financial aid programs. Hundreds of additional students sent
testimony to the federal Commission on the Future of Higher Education
urging them to address student debt issues.
Affordable Textbooks
The Student PIRGs have been leading the charge to make textbooks
affordable. We have been building support for “open textbooks” – books
that are available to students for free – and signed on over 2,000
college professors who support using open textbooks in their classes. In
August 2008, we helped get an Affordable Textbooks provision included
in the federal Higher Education Opportunity Act. The provision helps
lower the cost of textbooks for millions of students by requiring
publishers to disclose textbook pricing and revision information to
faculty and requiring publishers to offer textbooks and supplemental
materials "unbundled." It also asks colleges to provide the list of
assigned textbooks, including prices, for each course when students are
registering for classes.
Campaign Against Hunger and Homelessness
Thousands of students on campuses across the country join together
through our annual Hunger Cleanup each April to raise money and
volunteer in a day of service in their communities. Since students
started this annual tradition in 1984, more than 150,000 have
volunteered and their combined efforts have raised over $2 million.
This year, in addition to local charities, students donated funds to
relief projects in Haiti. In November 2009, we launched the Resolve
Conference, where 250 students were joined by activists, advocates and
organizers for a weekend of education and training to create
anti-poverty campaigns in their communities. Coming out of the
conference, participants joined hundreds of campuses holding
educational and service events during the annual Hunger and
Homelessness Awareness Week.
21st Century Transportation
We’re building support for 21st century transportation in America,
including high-speed rail and more and better mass transit. In 2009,
Student PIRG activists mobilized their peers and helped persuade
Congress to include an additional $2.5 billion down-payment for
high-speed rail in their appropriations bill, more than doubling
President Obama’s original recommendation. In California, CALPIRG
students led the field campaign in 2008 that passed Prop 1A, an
initiative to build a high-speed rail line connecting California’s
major cities.