By David Gipp
BISMARCK -- The budget battle in Washington was resolved in mid-April, and United Tribes Technical College came through OK with the help of friends.
As Herald readers know, we were closely watching how Congress and the president would resolve their differences and fund government for the remainder of this fiscal year.
A sizable portion of our operational funding had been deleted from the temporary measures passed to fund government. We found ourselves in limbo, caught up in the debate over the national budget. The potential existed for the loss of about $3.7 million -- 46 percent of the college's annual operational funding.
We would have had no practical way of making up for that. The financial reality would have hit the college and the Bismarck/Mandan community in August, around the time we are scheduled to begin Fall Semester.
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Fortunately, that scenario was averted. Funding for United Tribes was included as part of the agreement in Washington that resolved the federal budget.
Sorting out what happened: We know that earlier this year, when the U.S. House passed a bill to fund the government for the rest of fiscal year, career and technical education funding for Navajo Technical College and United Tribes mistakenly was considered an earmark by the House Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Service, and Education, chaired by Montana Rep. Denny Rehberg.
On that basis, our funds were cut from a temporary government funding bill that was signed by the president.
We knew that needed to be corrected in the final spending bill for FY 2011, or UTTC would face dire consequences. UTTC, Navajo Technical, our friends in Congress and many others worked very hard to show that a mistake had been made.
We all know that the president and Congress ultimately agreed that the federal government would not be shut down. Our agonizing period of uncertainty ended when the detailed spending bill became available, and we learned that funding for the colleges was included.
We were told by Rehberg's committee that considering us an earmark had been a mistake. That had been out position all along.
Now, distribution of the funds is in the hands of the secretary of education. We look forward to continuing uninterrupted with our academic calendar, course offerings and services to students and families, along with services to the many tribes and tribal programs in the region and around the nation.
Among the many friends and supporters who came to our defense and helped lift the uncertainty were 20 United Tribes students from the Crow Nation in Montana. Their letters to Rehberg helped clarify that a failure of our educational mission in Indian Country would have consequences for real people.
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North Dakota Rep. Rick Berg also visited with Rehberg. The entire North Dakota congressional delegation supported us, as did the governors of North Dakota and New Mexico, the New Mexico congressional delegation and Hawaii Sen. Daniel Inouye. This truly was a bipartisan effort.
Support from the Bismarck City Commission, the Bismarck-Mandan Development Association and the Chamber of Commerce showed that ours is an effort the entire community can support.
We can demonstrate the success of our well-established educational record dating back over four decades. We fulfill a vital role in providing a high-quality college education, jobs training and career-building programs for students who come from some of the nation's poorest rural areas -- communities that continually suffer high rates of unemployment and economic distress.
Our services open a pathway to independence for Americans with the greatest need.
United Tribes is grateful for the support of all who helped. Thank you for your good efforts and for your prayers. The Great Spirit has guided this important cause.
Gipp is president of United Tribes Technical College.