Commit to Graduate
When young people get personal letters from the Mayor of Houston,
it can encourage them to work harder in school. That’s the
cornerstone of the Commit to Graduate project.
Mayor Bill White sends a letter to each ninth-grader stressing the
importance—for themselves and their city—of getting a high school
diploma. The lesson is both civic and plain “dollars and cents.”
The Mayor writes, "Working hard in school can earn you the
freedom to make your own decisions about your life after graduation."
White asks for them to fill out and return a simple card pledging
to stay in school. In the years since the program began in 2005,
the mayor has received more than 19,500 cards from students, all
of them committing to continue pursuing their diplomas.
Students may experience exciting activities by committing to
stay in school. These could be courtside seats at a Houston
Comets game. They could mean an invitation backstage at a Beyoncé
concert, or up-close encounters with NBA All-Star Legends.

When you find a singing sensation or seven-foot basketball great
looking up to you, it shows that the community genuinely cares about
you and your commitment to graduate.
Letters from the Mayor and Commitment
Cards are not printed or mailed at taxpayer expense.