Boston College has launched a $125-million fundraising effort to bolster its commitment to need-blind admissions for undergraduates. The Be a Beacon Campaign for Financial Aid will run through May 31.

鈥淲e believe that any student who has earned admission through our rigorous admission process should be able to accept the offer to become an Eagle鈥攔egardless of their family鈥檚 financial circumstances,鈥 reads a statement on the . The site noted that Boston College鈥檚 undergraduate financial aid budget for 2020-21 is $152 million, which represents a 43 percent increase over the past decade.

In an October 22 letter, University President William P. Leahy, S.J., noted that BC is one of only 20 private national institutions of higher education in the United States that are need-blind in admission鈥攁dmitting students on the merit of their applications, not on their ability to afford tuition鈥攁nd also meet full demonstrated need of qualified undergraduates.

鈥淐urrent economic conditions and loss of family income have made it increasingly difficult for deserving applicants to enroll at 鈥榯he Heights,鈥 spotlighting the importance of financial aid and endowed scholarships,鈥 he wrote.

鈥淧lease join us in supporting individuals of potential, commitment, and generosity who will assist Boston College in living up to its mission and who will also contribute to resolving challenges of today and tomorrow.鈥

The Be a Beacon campaign website features a video message from University Trustee Steve Pemberton 鈥89, H 鈥15, a philanthropist, speaker, and executive whose best-selling autobiography describes how his BC education enabled him to overcome a childhood of poverty and hardship.

The site also includes testimonials from current and former BC students who have benefited from the University鈥檚 need-blind admission policy: They include artist and human rights activist Naren Briar 鈥20, the daughter of Iraqi refugees; Jamie Kweon 鈥21, a neuroscience major and music minor who works as a research assistant in Associate Professor of Psychology Liane Young鈥檚 Morality Lab; and physics major and budding entrepreneur Peter Huynh 鈥21, whose family is supporting five students in college at the same time.

University Communications | October 2020