They should sue the state
https://www.pvamu.edu/about_pvamu/college-history/https://12ft.io/proxy?q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.houstonchronicle.com%2Fnews%2Fhouston-texas%2Fhouston%2Farticle%2FHBCU-FUNDING-LEGE-16272089.phpThe University had its beginnings in the Texas Constitution of 1876, which, in separate articles, established an "Agricultural and Mechanical College" and pledged that "Separate schools shall be provided for the white and colored children, and impartial provisions shall be made for both." As a consequence of these constitutional provisions, the Fifteenth Legislature established "Alta Vista Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas for Colored Youth" on August 14,1876.
The report showed that 61 percent of 1890 land-grant institutions did not receive their one-to-one-matching funds in full between 2010 and 2012. Prairie View A&M only received about half its match from the state during that period.
During the 2018-2019 biennium, Prairie View received $23 million in federal funding but only $4 million from the state around 17 percent of what it's supposed to be given. Meanwhile, Texas A&M received $94 million from the federal government and $196 million more than double its share from the state, according to TAMU officials.
The U.S. government designated multiple colleges focused on agriculture and the mechanical arts and allocated federal aid with the
Morrill Act in 1862. Because education for Black students was excluded from this act, the second Morrill Act of 1890 gave 19 HBCUs, including Prairie View A&M, the same designation to help strengthen research and teaching, according to the government website. Federal funding is
often expected to be matched dollar for dollar by the state unless an institution applies for a waiver or forfeits their funding.
so looks like it's not law to be dollar for dollar, but there's a definite inequity in funding TAMU & PV from the state