Presidential candidate Kamala Harris announced a plan on Friday that provides Historically Black Colleges and Universities with $60 billion in assistance. The money would be split $50 billion to fund scholarships, fellowships, and research grants at HBCUs, and $10 billion to be set aside for infrastructure programs to build classrooms, laboratories, and other facilities at the schools — this according to the U.S. News and World Report.

"These campuses need to be upgraded and continue to attract world-class researchers," Harris said Friday during her National Urban League's annual conference speech. "It will enhance the student experience and allow them to compete in the global world."

Harris' plan is not the only one from a 2020 hopeful addressing HBCU funding; Sen. Elizabeth Warren introduced her own plan through Blavity in May. South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg also released funding goals in his Douglass Plan — which he also spoke about on stage at the National Urban League conference.

“We’ve learned the hard way that you can’t just take a racist structure, replace it with a neutral structure, and expect all the racism to wash away,” Buttigieg said, according to a Washington Post report.

Despite not being the only plan, Harris's option offers the most money, with Buttigieg and Warren pledging $25 billion and $50 billion respectively.

"By taking these challenges on, we don’t just move black America forward, we move all of America forward," Harris said in a tweet.

On top of that investment, Harris — who graduated from Howard University — also announced she plans to invest $2.5 billion to support teacher training programs at HBCUs. Harris cited research that shows black children are 13 percent more likely to go to college if they were able to have one black teacher before third grade, according to the U.S. News and World Report.

Harris will be participating in the second night of the Democratic Primary Debates on July 31 in Detroit.