You are here: American University School of Public Affairs Postsecondary Education & Economics Research (PEER) Center Workforce Pell: Expensive for Taxpayers and Risky for Students

Contact Us

Phone: (202) 885-2940

Graduate programs: spagrad@american.edu

Undergraduate programs: aupublicaffairs@american.edu

Kerwin Hall on a map

Public Affairs, School of 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW Washington, DC 20016 United States

Back to top

Workforce Pell: Expensive for Taxpayers and Risky for Students

Stephanie Riegg Cellini
May 2025

House Republicans recently passed legislation to extend Pell Grants to short-term job training programs – those lasting just 8 to 15 weeks – through their reconciliation bill. While the bill has not yet been approved by the Senate, the new “Workforce Pell” proposal is intended to expand access to training programs for low-income students, but there are two key design flaws as it is currently proposed.

  • First, it would open up billions of dollars of aid to unaccredited vocational programs.
  • Second, it would set only minimal guardrails to ensure value for students and taxpayers.

Research suggests that extending taxpayer subsidies to a new set of unaccredited and mostly for-profit programs with limited oversight by a gutted Department of Education will put students at risk and waste taxpayer dollars.
Read the full brief