Democracy Dies in Darkness

His bags were packed for college. Then his financial aid disappeared.

Perspective by
Columnist
Updated August 31, 2023 at 3:00 p.m. EDT|Published August 31, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
Kamari Felton, 22, grew up in homeless shelters in D.C. and recently got accepted to Frostburg State University. His financial aid was revoked the day before his freshman program was set to begin thanks to bureaucratic confusion in D.C. and Maryland. (Petula Dvorak/The Washington Post)
8 min

Kamari Felton has spent most of his life packing his bags.

As a kid who bounced between aunties’ sofas and homeless shelters, he got used to moving. But this time, as the 22-year-old packed up his room in the Covenant House shelter, he was thrilled. The next day, he’d be riding west toward green mountains and fresh air, to college at Frostburg State University in Maryland, where he was enrolled as a freshman, a scholarship in hand, his schedule already set.