Defunding the US Department of Education

“The federal government provides roughly 14% of funding for public K-12 education, with states and local governments contributing the majority. This federal funding can vary significantly from state to state.”

Federal public education funding is equivalent to 0.51% of total taxpayer income. Yikes, that is alot!

More funds to go to tax breaks. The Newsweek article is pretty good.

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“Our nation’s public schools, colleges, and universities are preparing the next generation of America’s leaders—we must take steps to strengthen education in this country, not take a wrecking ball to the agency that exists to do so.”

“A freeze on processing the cases was lifted early this month, but advocates question whether the department can make progress on them with a smaller staff,” reported the outlet.

“Special needs kids [are] now suffering because of a manufactured hysteria aimed [at] silencing dissent against genocide,” said writer and political analyst Yousef Munayyer. “Utter depravity.”

In their letter, Sanders and his Democratic colleagues noted that “several regional offices responsible for investigating potential violations of students’ civil rights in local schools” have also been shuttered, expressing alarm that many cases will likely “go uninvestigated and that students will be left in unsafe learning environments as a result.”

They noted that at a time of “massive income and wealth inequality, when 60% of people live paycheck to paycheck,” the federal government’s defunding of public education “would result in either higher property taxes or decreased funding for public schools, including in rural areas.”

“It is a national disgrace that the Trump administration is attempting to illegally abolish the Department of Education and thus, undermine a high-quality education for our students,” wrote the lawmakers. “These reductions will have devastating impacts on our nation’s students and we are deeply concerned that without staff, the department will be unable to fulfill critical functions, such as ensuring students can access federal financial aid, upholding students’ civil rights, and guaranteeing that federal funding reaches communities promptly and is well-spent.”

Trump, they noted, has expressed a desire “to return education back to the states” despite the fact that state governments and local school boards already make education policy, with just 11% of public education funding coming from the DOE.

However, “the Department of Education has a necessary and irreplaceable responsibility to implement federal laws that ensure equal opportunity for all children in this country,” they wrote. “These laws guarantee fundamental protections, such as ensuring that children with disabilities receive a free appropriate public education in the least restrictive environment, that students from low-income backgrounds and students of color will not be disproportionately taught by less experienced and qualified teachers, and that parents will receive information about their child’s academic achievement.”

“Without the Department of Education, there is no guarantee that states would uphold students’ civil and educational rights,” said the lawmakers.

“We will not stand by as you attempt to turn back the clock on education in this country through gutting the Department of Education. Our nation’s public schools, colleges, and universities are preparing the next generation of America’s leaders—we must take steps to strengthen education in this country, not take a wrecking ball to the agency that exists to do so.”