From Flint water crisis to fiscal reprieve: a Thurgood Marshall College Fund scholar’s path to success

October 5, 2025

As one Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF) scholar attending Leadership Institute put it, growing up in Flint, Michigan meant that bottled water was often stacked higher than opportunity.

Brandon J. Poplar, a senior law studies major at Delaware State University, was born in Pontiac, Michigan and raised in Flint during the water crisis.

“It shaped me early to understand resilience, but it also made me determined to carry my community’s story forward and to advance the legacy of my family,” Poplar said. 

Poplar said he graduated from high school with a 2.5 GPA and wasn’t sure he belonged in higher education. During his sophomore year, his grandmother, the woman who raised him, was diagnosed with dementia and Alzheimer’s. His family was also dealing with siblings who were without housing. 

“The emotional and financial toll nearly sent me home,” Poplar said. “That is when the Thurgood Marshall College Fund stepped in.”

Poplar said TMCF paid his balance and later awarded him with a renewable scholarship. 

“Those moments did more than provide financial relief,” he said. “They gave me the belief that I wasn’t alone, that someone was invested in my success.”

The financial relief gave Poplar the opportunity to lean into his education. 

“I became Delaware State University’s first-ever chief justice of the Student Government Association,” he said. “I earned my first all-As semester.”

He also competed in national pitch competitions like the Chevron Energy Innovation Summit and Moguls in the Making, researched economic issues as a fellow with EVHybrid Noire, studied abroad in Yangzhou, China, and took on roles as a Braven Hornet Ambassador and SIEML fellow.

“But the turning point for my career came through TMCF’s Leadership Institute,” Poplar said. “It was there that I met Vanguard, which led directly to my internship this past summer.”

The opportunity gave him the chance to work at a leading financial services firm and confirmed his passion for standing at the intersection of finance, strategy and public service.

“Leadership Institute is not just another conference. It is a pipeline,” Poplar said. “It develops us as leaders, prepares us for the workforce and places us in direct connection with employers who are ready to hire. I am living proof of that.”

After graduation, he said he plans to pursue a career in corporate banking and financial services before earning a Ph.D. in economics.

His long-term goal is to influence higher education and economic policy, specifically to improve financial literacy, youth development and the economic mobility of cities like Wilmington, Delaware and Flint.  

He’s also eyeing a career in higher education administration. 

“Deeply inspired by my university’s president, Dr. Tony Allen, my ultimate ambition is to become an HBCU president and build pathways for the next generation, especially young Black men, to succeed in college and beyond,” Poplar said. 

He credits TMCF as being a launching pad to these dreams. 

“TMCF did not just help me stay in school,” Poplar said. “They gave me opportunity, confidence and the belief that my story matters. And now, every time I walk into a room, whether it is a boardroom, a classroom, or a conference like Leadership Institute, I know that I belong.”

Related News

GED to engineering degree: the rise of a first-generation Thurgood Marshall College Fund scholar

One Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF) scholar attending the 25th-annual Leadership Institute took an unconventional path to higher education and career success.  Marcus McClean, a senior mechatronics engineering major at Morgan State University (Morgan), is a first-generation college student from Atlanta. As a trailblazer for his family, he made his own path to a degree.  […]

Thurgood Marshall College Fund scholar combines creativity, love of psychology and analytics to give others a voice 

For one Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF) scholar attending the 2025 Leadership Institute, the road to her aspirations was anything but a straight path.  Kimi-Lee Knight, a senior applied mathematics major at the University of the Virgin Islands (UVI), was previously more recognized for her abilities in music and writing than math. That didn’t stop […]

TMCF scholar went from no network to leading multi-million dollar projects

One Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF) scholar attending the 2025 Leadership Institute said he went from not having a network to leading multi-million dollar projects in the energy sector.  Kamron Wright, a senior mechanical engineering major at Prairie View A&M University (PVAMU) and first-generation college student, grew up in Dallas with very few mentors or […]