Nearly 3,000 Morehouse Graduates Get $10M In Student Debt Forgiven By Activist Group

By Nyah Peebles

Nearly 3,000Ā Morehouse CollegeĀ graduatesā€™ student debt has been cleared thanks to the Debt Collective ā€” a debtors union pushing to abolish all forms of debt.

On Monday, the Debt CollectiveĀ announced it collaborated with the all-menā€™s HBCU to wipe out all outstanding account balances that were in collections for the fall 2022 term and prior.

According to the university, Morehouse transferred the remaining balances to the Rolling Jubilee Fund, the Debt Collectiveā€™s sister organization, eliminating $9.7 million for 2,777 former students as a ā€œno-strings-attached gift.ā€

ā€œOur nation is defaulting on the promise of education when we burden communities, especially Black HBCU graduates, with crushing amounts of student debt,ā€Ā said Braxton Brewington, spokesperson for the Debt Collective.Ā ā€œThis nearly $10M of student debt cancellation will put thousands of Black folks in a better position to be able to save for retirement, purchase a home or start a small business. President Biden has yet to make good on his campaign promise to eliminate all student debt held by HBCU graduates. Weā€™re doing our part, and itā€™s time Biden does his. Forty-five million Americans need this relief.ā€

According toĀ researchĀ by the United Negro College Fund, students who attend HBCUs borrow at a far greater rate than their peers at other types of schools and are nearly three times as likely to borrow $40,000 or more.

The Legal Defense Fund found that in 2019,Ā 86% of Black students used student loansĀ to pay for their education, with an average of $39,500 taken out. Furthermore, in 2022, 57% of Black student loan borrowers hadĀ at least $25,000 of debtĀ from their education, according to the Federal Reserve.

This is the second time the Debt CollectiveĀ has aided Black students and alumni. Last year, the CollectiveĀ erased nearly $2 millionĀ of debtĀ held by about 500 students who attendedĀ Bennett College.

ā€œDebt has proven itself to be one of the strongest deterrents in a prospective studentsā€™ decision to attend college and inhibitors in alumniā€™s socioeconomic success post-graduation,ā€ David A. Thomas, president of Morehouse College, said in a statement. ā€œIt is why our Morehouseā€™s $500 million capital campaign aims to position the College as a need-blind institution by 2030. Partners like the Debt Collective and Rolling Jubilee are making the investment to help level the financial playing field for our students and alumni, and we are all tremendously grateful for their vote of confidence through such a generous gift and financial relief.ā€