Sen. Sinema, 4 others reintroduce affordable college books bill

Apr 8, 2019

Sen. Sinema, 4 others reintroduce affordable college books bill

KTAR

 

PHOENIX – U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema and four others in Congress have brought back a bill designed to make college more affordable by bolstering access to free online educational resources.

Sinema (D-Ariz.) and fellow Democrats Sens. Dick Durbin of Illinois, Angus King of Maine, Tina Smith of Minnesota and Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado introduced the Affordable College Textbook Act late last week.

In a related move, the U.S. Department of Education recently awarded Arizona State University $2.5 million in grant money to improve availability of open educational resources.

“Steep textbook costs should never hold an Arizonan back from an education. Our bill increases access to course materials so all students can receive a quality education,” Sinema said in a statement after Thursday’s congressional action.

The legislation would strengthen “existing price transparency requirements so students can easily identify classes that use open textbooks when they register,” the advocacy organization U.S. Public Interest Research Groups said.

Congress set aside a total of $10 million over the past two years in temporary funding to encourage adoption of open textbooks.

A version of the bill has been introduce multiple times since 2013.

Sinema’s office said the grant to ASU will support the expansion of open textbooks and other widely available course materials over the next three years.