• Home
  • Mail
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Search
  • Mobile
  • More
Yahoo
    • Skip to Navigation
    • Skip to Main Content
    • Skip to Related Content
    • Mail
    Advertisement

    Trump administration quietly cuts funding to the nation’s poorest schools

    Andrew Naughtie
    ,
    The Independent•March 3, 2020

     

    Thanks to an under-the-radar bookkeeping change at the Department of Education, hundreds of rural schools across the US are set to lose vital funds.

    As reported in the New York Times, the department has changed the eligibility criteria for the Rural and Low-Income School Programme, which provides funding for school districts in some of the poorest parts of the country.

    The change will make it harder for districts to demonstrate their eligibility, meaning hundreds of them will lose tens of thousands of dollars – and in some cases much more.

    Nearly a seventh of the US’s public school pupils live in rural school districts, which have long been poor and underfunded. Many depend on the programme to fund everything from anti-bullying initiatives to counselling to language lessons for non-English speakers.

    To qualify for the programme, school districts must prove that at least 20 per cent of their area’s school-age children live in poverty.

    Officially, they are required to do so using census data, but because the census often leaves out many people living in rural areas, they have in practice been allowed to cite the percentage of their pupils who qualify for free or subsidised meals.

    The department has now abruptly decided that it will only allow districts to use census data, meaning districts will struggle to account for all children in their local areas who would qualify.

    A department spokeswoman told the Times that the move is simply a matter of following the law and that Congress can legislate to formally change the criteria, but the move has nonetheless met with condemnation from both Democrats and Republicans.

    Even some of those sympathetic to Donald Trump and invested in his re-election are baffled as to why the department would withdraw the money from poor, rural districts, including core parts of the president’s electoral base.

    Senators including Susan Collins of Maine are now scrambling to put together a fix that will ensure schools can still access the programme.

    The Department of Education is led by Betsy DeVos, who was one of Mr Trump’s most controversial cabinet appointees at the start of his administration. She has drawn fire both for her lack of experience in schools and her past statements advocating a religious agenda for public education.

    Our goal is to create a safe and engaging place for users to connect over interests and passions. In order to improve our community experience, we are temporarily suspending article commenting.

    What to Read Next

    • ClassTag Launches ClassTag Connect, a Comprehensive Parent Engagement Platform for Schools and Districts

      PR Newswire
    • Utah State Board of Education Announces Statewide Access to Scrible to Support Schools with Research and Writing Amid Distance Learning

      PR Newswire
    • We’re So Done With DeVos — Here’s What We Need From Our New Secretary Of Education

      Scary Mommy
    • 'Wheel Of Fortune' Contestant Stunningly Fails At 'Declaring Victory'

      HuffPost
    • Lindsey Graham on the defensive over calls to state election officials

      Yahoo News
    • Latino voters who fled dictatorships fear election was stolen from President Trump

      USA TODAY
    • Kelly Clarkson can't take 'glued' eyes off 'Voice' contestant Ian Flanigan: 'It was inappropriate!'

      Yahoo Music
    • Trump campaign would have to pay nearly $8 million for Wisconsin recount

      USA TODAY
    • Committee to Protect Journalists: 30th annual International Press Freedom Awards

      Yahoo News
    • Georgia official says Graham asked him about tossing ballots

      Yahoo News Video
    • Sir Keir Starmer: Jeremy Corbyn being readmitted to Labour after anti-Semitism comments marks ‘another painful day for Jewish community’

      Evening Standard
    • Ivanka Trump's Childhood Best Friend Says She Had to Speak Out with Scathing Account of Their Bond

      People
    • COVID-19 infections are soaring. Lockdowns could be coming. A list of restrictions in your state.

      USA TODAY
    • The Trumps are refusing to turn over the keys to the Bidens — and Michelle and Barack Obama have had enough

      Yahoo News
    • Anti-Trump Republican Gov. Larry Hogan appeals to 'exhausted majority' as he teases presidential bid

      Yahoo News
    • Pentagon will cut troop levels to 2,500 in Iraq, Afghanistan

      Yahoo News Video
    • Pentagon to withdraw troops from Afghanistan, Iraq in Trump's waning days

      USA TODAY
    • NFL's first all-Black officiating crew will work Buccaneers-Rams MNF game

      Yahoo Sports
    • Stock market news live updates: Stocks fall as investors pause after vaccine-fueled rally

      Yahoo Finance
    • More than 1 million kids have been diagnosed with COVID-19. Why isn't it getting more attention?

      Yahoo Life
    • National security adviser discusses U.S. cuts in troop levels in Afghanistan and Iraq

      Yahoo News Video
    • Florida lawmakers convene and make it official: Containing COVID-19 not their problem

      Miami Herald
    • Home Depot is spending $1 billion to give thousands of its workers a raise

      Yahoo Finance
    • Mark Zuckerberg said banning Steve Bannon from the platform for advocating for the beheading of Dr. Anthony Fauci and FBI director Christopher Wray is 'not what our policies would suggest'

      Business Insider
    • Yahoo News Network
    • Help
    • Privacy (Updated)
    • Privacy Dashboard
    • Suggestions
    • About our Ads
    • Terms (Updated)
    • Sitemap