Graduation from above

The U.S. guarantees free college for all Americans

Note: This is an imagined future story, written as if a projected milestone has occurred. It is based on current trends and evidence, not confirmed events.

After decades of state-by-state experimentation and failed federal proposals, the United States has enacted a national free college guarantee — covering tuition at public two- and four-year institutions for every American, regardless of age, income, or immigration status. The legislation, signed into law in 2029 C.E., draws directly on the model pioneered by New Mexico’s Opportunity Scholarship, widely considered the most inclusive state-level program in the country when it launched in 2022 C.E.

The milestone at a glance

  • Free college for all: Public tuition is now fully covered at two- and four-year institutions nationwide, including career certificates, associate degrees, and bachelor’s programs.
  • Broadest eligibility ever: The federal program covers recent high school graduates, returning adult learners, part-time students, and immigrants — mirroring the inclusive design of New Mexico’s pioneering scholarship.
  • State momentum: By 2022 C.E., nearly 30 states already had free-tuition programs in place; that foundation made federal passage politically viable within the decade.

How we got here

The road to a national guarantee was long and uneven. In 2022 C.E., President Biden’s federal free community college proposal was stripped from the Build Back Better bill. But states kept moving. New Mexico, Maine, and others passed their own programs, and by the mid-2020s, more than 40 states had some form of tuition-free pathway on the books.

That critical mass changed the politics. Advocates like Morley Winograd, then president of the Campaign for Free College Tuition, had set a simple benchmark: “If we get to 50, it’s mission accomplished.” Congress didn’t wait for 50. Once 40-plus states had functioning programs — and the data on enrollment gains started rolling in — the federal case became hard to argue against.

New Mexico’s program was the clearest proof of concept. Unlike many “last-dollar” scholarship models that simply fill gaps left by federal Pell Grants, New Mexico applied state aid first, freeing up federal and private funds to cover books, housing, and childcare. That design — treating tuition as a floor, not a ceiling — became the template for the national law.

Who it reaches

The populations this reaches matter as much as the policy itself. In 2022 C.E., a National Center for Education Statistics study of more than 23,000 students found that high schoolers were far more likely to pursue college if they believed their families could afford it. College enrollment had already dropped more than 5% from pre-pandemic levels, with schools serving low- and middle-income students hit hardest.

The new national program is designed to reverse that slide. Adult learners — a population that includes millions of workers displaced by automation — are explicitly included, not treated as an afterthought. So are part-time students, who have historically been locked out of most scholarship programs despite making up a large share of community college enrollment.

For students like Carla Osborn, a nursing student in New Mexico who credited her state scholarship with keeping her in school in 2022 C.E., the national guarantee means no future student has to wait and hope and pray that something works out. The safety net is structural now, not serendipitous.

What the critics got right — and what changed

The critics of free college were never entirely wrong. Tuition-free programs, as designed in most states, didn’t cover fees, books, or housing — the costs that hit lower-income students hardest. Some economists pointed out that the lowest-income students, through Pell Grants and existing aid, were already paying little in tuition at public schools. Diverting funds toward a universal tuition benefit risked shortchanging other campus needs, including faculty hiring and student services.

The 2029 C.E. law addresses some of these concerns directly. A supplemental wraparound fund — modeled on New Mexico’s approach — channels federal Pell dollars toward non-tuition costs once tuition is covered. Campus operations funding is ring-fenced and increased separately.

It doesn’t solve everything. Room and board at four-year institutions remain expensive; in 2022 C.E., total tuition at four-year private universities averaged over $38,000, with living costs on top. The new law does not extend to private institutions, and affordability gaps beyond tuition persist for many students. Implementation will vary by state, and early evidence suggests some institutions are struggling to absorb the influx of new enrollees without straining advising and support services.

A generation’s opening

What the law does change, definitively, is the opening condition. A student anywhere in the country can now walk into a public college without a tuition bill waiting for them. That psychological shift — the removal of the price tag at the door — is precisely what advocates argued for years was the missing piece. Research consistently showed that perceived affordability drove enrollment decisions more than actual cost after aid.

“If you want people to enroll, tell them it’s free,” Winograd said back in 2022 C.E. The country finally took that advice.

This is part of a broader set of education access gains reshaping opportunity across the United States — one of several structural shifts making institutions more reachable for people who were previously priced out. The question now is whether the rest of the affordability stack — housing, food, childcare — can be addressed with the same resolve.

Read more

For more on this story, see: CNBC — Free college is now a reality in nearly 30 states

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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