Connecticut lawmakers are considering banning the use of legacy and donor preferences in admissions to all colleges and universities across the state, including private ones like Yale University.
A bill was advanced to the Senate floor on Thursday, days after Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin barring to a public college or university when being considered for admission. The first such law was signed in Colorado in 2021.
There has been pushback to Connecticut's bill from some private institutions in the state, including Yale, which have argued the state should not be dictating how they make admissions decisions, just like it shouldn't dictate decisions on curriculum and faculty hiring. But proponents note how these schools, which receive substantial tax benefits for their non-profit status, have the power to provide all kinds of students with a ticket to an elite world.
鈥淚f you look at leaders of Fortune 500 companies, you look at members of Congress, United States Supreme Court justices, this really matters to how our society operates,鈥 said Democratic state Sen. Derek Slap, co-chair of the Higher Education.
in 2022 found that legacy students in the freshman class ranged from 4% to 23%, though many schools declined to provide basic data in response to AP鈥檚 request. The AP that at four schools 鈥 Notre Dame, USC, Cornell and Dartmouth 鈥 legacy students outnumbered Black students.
Slap noted how the U.S. Supreme Court struck down in college admissions, proving they don't have institutional freedom of make preferences based on race.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 egregious, though, that this preference, the one for wealthy folks, remains,鈥 he said.
Republican Sen. Kevin Kelly said he has heard from private schools in his district, especially faith-based colleges, that are concerned about how they would be impacted by the legislation. He said the ability of institutions of higher education to 鈥渆xercise their freedom to teach how they are and what they are" has helped to create 鈥淎merican exceptionalism.鈥
鈥淚 think when the state government starts to interfere in that process, we鈥檙e not only interfering in private relations of institutions, but we鈥檙e also interfering in that American excellence,鈥 he said.
Jeremiah Quinlan, dean of Undergraduate Admissions and Financial Aid at Yale University, recently told state lawmakers that the school agrees with the 鈥渃entral aim鈥 of the bill, which is to enroll more low-income and first-generation students. But in addition to the state overstepping its bounds, he said the bill doesn't address the key challenge of providing less advantaged students with the resources needed to prepare for college and graduate on time.
He also said Yale's undergraduate admissions office strikes to 鈥渁ssemble a group of the most promising students from the most diverse collection of backgrounds.鈥 He said undergraduates from families that can't afford the full cost of attending Yale receive a need-based scholarship that covers tuition, housing, meals, travel, books and personal expenses.
Last year, Wesleyan University, another private school in Connecticut, of giving preferential treatment in admissions to those whose families have historical ties to the school.
The bill, which cleared the committee on a vote of 18-4, moves to the Senate for further action.