The
announcement came on the heels of the U.S. Education Department
launching a civil rights investigation into Harvard to determine
whether the college racially discriminates by favoring such
"legacy" applicants in its admissions process.
Legacy admissions at schools such as Harvard University have
been shown to overwhelmingly favor white, wealthy students over
students of color from disadvantaged backgrounds.
Many U.S. colleges and universities use legacy admissions
policies, but they have drawn renewed scrutiny since June, when
the Supreme Court struck down race-conscious policies adopted by
Harvard and the University of North Carolina to ensure more
non-white students were admitted.
The bill announced on Wednesday, the Fair College Admissions for
Students Act, was introduced by Senator Jeff Merkley in 2022,
but did not make it beyond a Senate committee.
Merkley urged lawmakers to reconsider the legislation at a press
conference alongside two other Democrats: Representative Jamaal
Bowman and Senator Chris Van Hollen.
"We have discrimination against children more qualified from
challenged backgrounds, and in favor of less-qualified, from
affluent backgrounds," Merkley said, noting that he was the
first in his family to attend college.
"What kind of a sense of opportunity is that?"
Viet Nguyen, executive director of EdMobilizer, a non-profit
that has been campaigning against legacy admissions since 2018,
joined the lawmakers at Wednesday's press conference.
Nguyen, a first-generation college student who graduated from
Brown and received degrees from Stanford and Harvard, said
college application questions about legacy status had "signaled"
to him that he did not belong in higher education.
EdMobilizer is pushing alumni of 30 top colleges and
universities to withhold donations from their schools until they
end legacy admissions.
Wesleyan University and the University of Minnesota's Twin
Cities campus announced they would stop using legacy admissions
in July, following a handful of other U.S. higher education
institutions that have ended them in recent years.
(Reporting by Julia Harte; Editing by Donna Bryson and Alistair
Bell)
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