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FUTURE act helps provide funding for tribal colleges in Montana

Salish Kootenai College in Pablo is one of the schools that benefits
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PABLO — Funding for minority-serving institutions like tribal colleges was approved in the Senate earlier this week.

Last week the Senate unanimously voted to renew the FUTURE act which helps provide 255 million dollars annually for Tribal Colleges, Historically Black Colleges, and other minority serving institutions.

Salish Kootenai College in Pablo takes that money and uses it to expand their programs and help recruit and retain students.

“What we use it for is student retention efforts, student support, we use it to fund start up programs so if we are thinking about a new major there is a lot of cost to implementing it in the beginning. This helps us to do that,” said SKC President Sandra Boham.

The funding helps SKC develop new curriculum like advanced manufacturing and drone pilot programs that helps keep the school at the forefront of education.

According to Boham SKC’s student body is also getting younger and the funding helps develop a campus that younger students would want to attend and stay at.

Boham said, “we still get a lot of non-traditional students but we are seeing more traditional aged students and what they want in student life is a lot different than what it was 10 years ago and so we are kind of out here and isolated a little bit so what they want is they want us to help create a community, so we need to have activities. We need to have ways they can socialize. We need to have ways to get them to movie theatres and shopping.”

SKC hired a student engagement coordinator to help develop a strategy to keep its younger student body.

Things like building a student health center on campus.

“One of the other things that we did was we have a student health center on campus and that came from students letting us know that this is something they needed through our student engagement person and so we were able to get that going.,” said Boham.

The FUTURE act now awaits approval by the President of the United States.