Deal, House Bolster HOPE Bill
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3/1/11 In an overwhelming and bipartisan 152-22 vote, the Georgia House today passed Gov. Nathan Deal's HOPE bill after including the governor's amendment that would make it easier for Zell Miller Scholars to keep their full benefit package. “Members of the House have worked with me in a bipartisan way
to strengthen this bill even further,” Deal said. “The
legislative process is working effectively. We’ve put together
the right piece of legislation that keeps our programs among the
most generous in the nation while placing them on firm financial
footing. Today, we are one step closer to ensuring that HOPE
endures for Georgia’s best and brightest and pre-k continues to
prepare 4-year-old Georgians for educational excellence.” Deal credited Speaker David Ralston’s leadership for building
a broad coalition of support for the legislation. Nearly every
Republican in the House and two-thirds of Democrats voted yes. “This is a realistic and sensible approach to preserve HOPE
for today and tomorrow’s young Georgians,” said House Speaker
David Ralston. “I applaud Governor Deal for taking action and
leading on one of the most important issues the General Assembly
will address this year because doing nothing was not an option.” The House worked with the governor to lower the GPA minimum
that Zell Miller Scholars must maintain while in college to
maintain the full benefit package. Under the House-passed
legislation, Zell Miller Scholars must keep at least a 3.3 grade
point average, as opposed to the 3.5 requirement in the original
bill. Deal wanted to bring the standards more closely in line
with the honors program requirements at our state’s major
research institutions. “We want to do everything we can to keep Georgia’s best and brightest in school with the full benefit package, while still creating incentives for students to work hard and go above and beyond.” |
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