Through a $1 million grant from the State of Qatar via the Qatar Harvey Fund and the Rebuild Texas Fund, scholarships are now available to Hurricane Harvey-impacted students at five campuses within the Texas A&M University System, including Prairie View A&M University (PVAMU). The generous grant will help students whose lives were upended by Hurricane Harvey with assistance for tuition, fees, books, living expenses, and even emergency expenses. The grant money will be available beginning in fall 2019.

In fall 2017, as Hurricane Harvey hit and lingered over Texas, students, from what was later identified as the impacted counties, enrolled at PVAMU. Classes were delayed and faculty and staff were mobilized to meet the needs of struggling students. Most students did return to the University, but many withdrew and even those who did return continued to struggle with personal and financial challenges preventing their success. Many of the impacted students were from economically disadvantaged environments, further complicating their recovery.

Funding for the grant was provided by the State of Qatar through its Qatar Harvey Fund, a $30 million fund established in 2017 for the long-term recovery of southeast Texas. The funding will be granted through a partnership between the Qatar Harvey Fund and the Rebuild Texas Fund. The Rebuild Texas Fund,Ā a collaborative project of the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation and the OneStar Foundation, was created to support the rebuilding of Texas communities hit hard by Hurricane Harvey.

ā€œQatar and Texas have many long-standing ties, including a Texas A&M campus in Qatar that has awarded some 900 engineering degrees over more than a dozen years,ā€ said His Excellency Sheikh Meshal bin Hamad Al-Thani, Qatarā€™s Ambassador to the U.S. ā€œWhen we saw the devastation from Hurricane Harvey, we created the Qatar Harvey Fund to help our friends in Texas recover from the storm. We are proud to once again partner with the Rebuild Texas Fund to support Texas students impacted by Hurricane Harvey.ā€

 

John Sharp, Chancellor of the Texas A&M System, said the grant will give deserving students a second chance at their college dreams.

ā€œThe Texas A&M University System is very thankful for this grant,ā€ Sharp said. ā€œThis money will help rebuild the future for hundreds of deserving Texans whose dreams of obtaining a degree were rained on by Harvey.ā€

To be eligible for assistance, beneficiaries must be:

  • A current student impacted by Hurricane Harvey and enrolled in one of the five included A&M System universities (Texas A&M University, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, Texas A&M University at Galveston, Texas A&M University-Kingsville, Prairie View A&M University);
  • Or, be a student who withdrew from one of these universities as a result of Hurricane Harvey and has not yet re-enrolled;
  • Or, be a student who was admitted to one of these universities beginning in fall 2017 but did not attend because of Harvey. Students must also have had a minimum cumulative grade point average of 2.0 for undergraduate and 3.0 for graduate and doctoral students, if currently enrolled.
  • The applicant must also be able to demonstrate, with data or anecdotally, the effect of Harvey on their financial situation.

To learn more and to apply, visit the Hurricane Harvey Relief.