Affordable College Textbook Act

The Affordable College Textbook Act is a United States legislative bill intended to support use of open textbooks. It was introduced on April 4, 2019, to the 116th Congress by four senators (Dick Durbin of Illinois, Angus King of Maine, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, Tina Smith of Minnesota), and one representative (Joe Neguse of Colorado).[1] Organizations supporting the bill include the American Federation of Teachers, the American Association of Community Colleges, the Association of Research Libraries, and Creative Commons.[1]

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History

Previously, the bill was introduced to the 115th Congress on September 26, 2017.[2] If passed, the program would have tried to make education less expensive for college students.[2] The U.S. Department of Education would have coordinated funding. U.S. Senators Dick Durbin of Illinois, Al Franken of Minnesota, and Angus King of Maine sponsored S.1864, and U.S. Representatives Jared Polis of Colorado and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona sponsored the identical H.R.3840. Later co-sponsors in the Senate included Democrats Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, Benjamin Cardin of Maryland, Jack Reed of Rhode Island, and Tina Smith of Minnesota.[2] Later co-sponsors in the House included a mixture of Republicans and Democrats: Carlos Curbelo of Florida, Peter DeFazio of Oregon, Peter King of New York, Mia Love of Utah, Tom MacArthur of New Jersey, and Rick Nolan of Minnesota.[3]

Similar bills had been previously introduced in 2009,[4] 2010, 2013,[5] and 2015[6] as the "Open College Textbook Act" and the "Affordable College Textbook Act".[7]

In 2018, Congress budgeted five million dollars for a related pilot program.[8]

gollark: That seems plausible.
gollark: What *is* this?
gollark: Cryptocurrencies *also* do (not the tax bit) but very unstably.
gollark: US dollars have value because lots of people are willing to accept them/think they do (also to a lesser extent because the government requires them to be used for taxes).
gollark: Also, there *are* already tons of educational qualifications for maths and such, it's just that people don't use them that way.

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