National Coalition for Literacy Discussion List
View all threadsNot official. Still important.
Education https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education
Trump’s first full education budget: Deep cuts to public school programs in
pursuit of school choice
Donald Trump, then president-elect, stands with Betsy DeVos after a meeting
in November 2016. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
By Emma Brown https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/emma-brown/, Valerie
Strauss https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/valerie-strauss/ and Danielle
Douglas-Gabriel https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/danielle-douglas/ May
17 at 3:14 PM
<emma.brown@washpost.com;Valerie.Strauss@washpost.com;douglasd@washpost.com?subject=Reader%20feedback%20for%20%27Trump%E2%80%99s%20first%20full%20education%20budget:%20Deep%20cuts%20to%20public%20school%20programs%20in%20pursuit%20of%20school%20choice%27>
Funding for college work-study programs would be cut in half,
public-service loan forgiveness would end and hundreds of millions of
dollars that public schools could use for mental health, advanced
coursework and other services would vanish under a Trump administration
plan to cut $10.6 billion from federal education initiatives, according to
budget documents obtained by The Washington Post.
The administration would channel part of the savings into its top priority:
school choice. It seeks to spend about $400 million to expand charter
schools and vouchers for private and religious schools, and another $1
billion to push public schools to adopt choice-friendly policies.
President Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos have repeatedly said
they want to shrink the federal role in education and give parents more
opportunity to choose their children’s schools.
The documents — described by an Education Department employee as a
near-final version of the budget expected to be released next week — offer
the clearest picture yet of how the administration intends to accomplish
that goal.
Play Video 1:57
Who is Betsy DeVos?
Here's what you need to know about Betsey DeVos, the billionaire donor who
became President Trump's education secretary. (Photo: Jabin Botsford/The
Washington Post)
Though Trump and DeVos are proponents of local control, their proposal to
use federal dollars to entice districts to adopt school-choice policies is
reminiscent of the way the Obama administration offered federal money to
states that agreed to adopt its preferred education policies through a
program called Race to the Top.
The proposed cuts in long-standing programs — and the simultaneous new
investment in alternatives to traditional public schools — are a sign of
the Trump administration’s belief that federal efforts to improve education
have failed. DeVos, who has previously derided government, is now leading
an agency she views as an impediment to progress.
“It’s time for us to break out of the confines of the federal government’s
arcane approach to education,” DeVos said this month in Salt Lake City.
“Washington has been in the driver’s seat for over 50 years with very
little to show for its efforts.”
[Is government a ‘force for good,’ or does it ‘really suck’? Education
Dept. is at a pivot point.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/is-government-a-force-for-good-or-does-it-really-suck-ed-dept-at-a-pivot-point-between-obama-trump/2017/01/14/191f9438-c78c-11e6-bf4b-2c064d32a4bf_story.html?utm_term=.b44f4fe2d9a8]
The proposed budget would also reshape financial aid programs that help 12
million students pay for college.
A White House official said Wednesday it would be premature to comment on
any aspect of “ever-changing internal discussion” about the president’s
budget before its publication. “The president and his Cabinet are working
collaboratively to create a leaner, more efficient government that does
more with less of taxpayers’ hard-earned dollars,” the official said.
Liz Hill, an Education Department spokeswoman, emphasized that all figures
are preliminary until officially released next week. Hill said that the
proposed budget protects special-education funding, ensures careful
stewardship of taxpayer dollars and demonstrates the administration’s
“strong commitment to ensuring the Department of Education provides more
educational options for low-income students.”
The budget proposal calls for a net $9.2 billion cut to the department, or
13.6 percent of the spending level Congress approved last month. It is
likely to meet resistance on Capitol Hill because of strong constituencies
seeking to protect current funding, ideological opposition to vouchers and
fierce criticism of DeVos, a longtime Republican donor who became a
household name during a bruising Senate confirmation battle.
Asked for comment, a spokesman for Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), chairman
of the Senate Education Committee, referred to Alexander’s response in
March to the release of Trump’s budget outline. That statement emphasized
that while the president may suggest a budget, “under the Constitution,
Congress passes appropriations bills.”
Under the administration’s budget, two of the department’s largest
expenditures in K-12 education, special education and Title I funds to help
poor children, would remain unchanged compared to federal funding levels in
the first half of fiscal 2017. However, high-poverty schools are likely to
receive fewer dollars than in the past because of a new law that allows
states to use up to 7 percent of Title I money for school improvement
before distributing it to districts.
The cuts would come from eliminating at least 22 programs, some of which
Trump outlined in March. Gone, for example, would be $1.2 billion for
after-school programs that serve 1.6 million children, most of whom are
poor, and $2.1 billion for teacher training and class-size reduction.
[Trump budget casualty: After-school programs for 1.6 million kids. Most
are poor.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/trump-budget-casualty-afterschool-programs-for-16-million-kids-most-are-poor/2017/03/16/78802430-0a6f-11e7-b77c-0047d15a24e0_story.html?utm_term=.976a59ab44ca]
The documents obtained by The Post — dated May 23, the day the president’s
budget is expected to be released — outline the rest of the cuts, including
a $15 million program that provides child care for low-income parents in
college; a $27 million arts education program; two programs targeting
Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian students, totaling $65 million; two
international education and foreign language programs, $72 million; a $12
million program for gifted students; and $12 million for Special Olympics
education programs.
Other programs would not be eliminated entirely, but would be cut
significantly. Those include grants to states for career and technical
education, which would lose $168 million, down 15 percent compared to
current funding; adult basic literacy instruction, which would lose $96
million (down 16 percent); and Promise Neighborhoods, an Obama-era
initiative meant to build networks of support for children in needy
communities, which would lose $13 million (down 18 percent).
The Trump administration would dedicate no money to a fund for student
support and academic enrichment that is meant to help schools pay for,
among other things, mental-health services, anti-bullying initiatives,
physical education, Advanced Placement courses and science and engineering
instruction. Congress created the fund, which totals $400 million this
fiscal year, by rolling together several smaller programs. Lawmakers
authorized as much as $1.65 billion, but the administration’s budget for it
in the next fiscal year is zero.
The cuts would make space for investments in choice, including $500 million
for charter schools, up 50 percent over current funding. The administration
also wants to spend $250 million on “Education Innovation and Research
Grants,” which would pay for expanding and studying the impacts of vouchers
for private and religious schools. It’s not clear how much would be spent
on research versus on the vouchers themselves.
There is currently only one federally funded voucher program, in the
District of Columbia. A recent Education Department analysis of that
program found that after a year in private school, voucher recipients
performed worse on standardized tests than their counterparts who remained
in public school.
The administration would devote $1 billion in Title I dollars meant for
poor children to a new grant program (called Furthering Options for
Children to Unlock Success, or FOCUS) for school districts that agree to
allow students to choose which public school they attend — and take their
federal, state and local dollars with them.
The goal is to do away with neighborhood attendance zones that the
administration says trap needy kids in struggling schools. The documents
cite Minneapolis (where parents can choose which city school their children
attend) and Hartford, Conn. (where students can cross city-suburban lines
to attend school) as examples.
But the notion of allowing Title I dollars to follow the student — known as
“portability” — is a controversial idea that the Republican-led Senate
rejected in 2015. Many Democrats argue that it is a first step toward
private-school vouchers and would siphon dollars from schools with high
poverty to those in more affluent neighborhoods.
Leaders of historically black colleges and universities had sought an
increase in federal funding for their institutions. The administration’s
budget proposal would hold funding flat compared to spending levels over
the first half of fiscal 2017.
[Booing students at DeVos’s commencement speech told to shut up or get
diplomas sent in mail
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2017/05/10/betsy-devos-booed-at-bethune-cookman-graduation/?utm_term=.5bbbcb745d46]
The administration is also seeking to overhaul key elements of federal
financial aid. The spending proposal would maintain funding for Pell Grants
for students in financial need, but it would eliminate more than $700
million in Perkins loans for disadvantaged students; nearly halve the
work-study program that helps students work their way through school,
cutting $490 million; take a first step toward ending subsidized loans, for
which the government pays interest while the borrower is in school; and end
loan forgiveness for public servants.
The loan forgiveness program, enacted in 2007, was designed to encourage
college graduates to pursue careers as social workers, teachers, public
defenders or doctors in rural areas. There are at least 552,931 people on
track to receive the benefit, with the first wave of forgiveness set for
October. It’s unclear how the proposed elimination would affect those
borrowers.
The administration also wants to replace five income-driven student loan
repayment plans with a single plan.
That change would likely benefit many undergraduate borrowers, who
currently can have the balance of their loan forgiven after paying 10
percent of their income for 20 years. Trump’s proposal — which makes good
on a campaign promise — would raise the maximum payment to 12.5 percent of
income, but shorten the payment period to 15 years.
The proposal is less sweet for borrowers who take out loans to earn
advanced degrees. They currently pay monthly bills capped at 10 percent of
income for 25 years. Under the new plan, they’d pay more (12.5 percent of
income) for longer (30 years).
[Here’s what the Trump higher ed plan might mean for you
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2017/05/17/trump-and-devos-plan-to-reshape-higher-education-finance-heres-what-it-might-mean-for-you/]
There were no estimates on how much the government would save by
eliminating public-service loan forgiveness, overhauling the income-based
repayment plans and ending subsidized loans.
The spending plan supports year-round Pell Grants, which allow low-income
students to use the money for three semesters of college, instead of two.
That way, students can take a full load of courses year-round and earn a
degree faster. The administration also would increase available funds for
year-round Pell by $16.3 billion over 10 years.
Still, the maximum annual award would remain flat at $5,920. And without
any directive to index the award to inflation, that ceiling might remain in
place for the foreseeable future.
Local Headlines newsletter
Daily headlines about the Washington region.
Trump is seeking an additional $158 million for salaries and expenses in
the Education Department, up 7 percent, money that according to the budget
documents would go toward loan-servicing costs, improved
information-technology security, auditing and investigations and additional
security costs for the secretary. DeVos has contracted with the U.S.
Marshals Service to provide security rather than using the in-house
security team that guarded previous secretaries.
Despite that increase, the agency workforce would decline by about 150
positions, or 4 percent.
The staffing decline at the department’s Office for Civil Rights — which is
dealing with a large increase in discrimination complaints — would be
steeper.
Trump is seeking $106.8 million for the civil rights office, unchanged from
the funding level over the first half of fiscal 2017. But — thanks to a
recent bump from Congress — the proposed total is $1.7 million less than
the office is now receiving. The spending proposal would result in the loss
of more than 40 of roughly 570 positions.
Not official. Still sad.
On Wed, May 17, 2017 at 11:09 PM, Amanda Bergson-Shilcock <
amandabs@nationalskillscoalition.org> wrote:
Not official. Still important.
Education https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education
Trump’s first full education budget: Deep cuts to public school programs
in pursuit of school choice
Donald Trump, then president-elect, stands with Betsy DeVos after a
meeting in November 2016. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
By Emma Brown https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/emma-brown/, Valerie
Strauss https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/valerie-strauss/ and Danielle
Douglas-Gabriel https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/danielle-douglas/ May
17 at 3:14 PM
<emma.brown@washpost.com;Valerie.Strauss@washpost.com;douglasd@washpost.com?subject=Reader%20feedback%20for%20%27Trump%E2%80%99s%20first%20full%20education%20budget:%20Deep%20cuts%20to%20public%20school%20programs%20in%20pursuit%20of%20school%20choice%27>
Funding for college work-study programs would be cut in half,
public-service loan forgiveness would end and hundreds of millions of
dollars that public schools could use for mental health, advanced
coursework and other services would vanish under a Trump administration
plan to cut $10.6 billion from federal education initiatives, according to
budget documents obtained by The Washington Post.
The administration would channel part of the savings into its top
priority: school choice. It seeks to spend about $400 million to expand
charter schools and vouchers for private and religious schools, and another
$1 billion to push public schools to adopt choice-friendly policies.
President Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos have repeatedly said
they want to shrink the federal role in education and give parents more
opportunity to choose their children’s schools.
The documents — described by an Education Department employee as a
near-final version of the budget expected to be released next week — offer
the clearest picture yet of how the administration intends to accomplish
that goal.
Play Video 1:57
Who is Betsy DeVos?
Here's what you need to know about Betsey DeVos, the billionaire donor who
became President Trump's education secretary. (Photo: Jabin Botsford/The
Washington Post)
Though Trump and DeVos are proponents of local control, their proposal to
use federal dollars to entice districts to adopt school-choice policies is
reminiscent of the way the Obama administration offered federal money to
states that agreed to adopt its preferred education policies through a
program called Race to the Top.
The proposed cuts in long-standing programs — and the simultaneous new
investment in alternatives to traditional public schools — are a sign of
the Trump administration’s belief that federal efforts to improve education
have failed. DeVos, who has previously derided government, is now leading
an agency she views as an impediment to progress.
“It’s time for us to break out of the confines of the federal government’s
arcane approach to education,” DeVos said this month in Salt Lake City.
“Washington has been in the driver’s seat for over 50 years with very
little to show for its efforts.”
[Is government a ‘force for good,’ or does it ‘really suck’? Education
Dept. is at a pivot point.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/is-government-a-force-for-good-or-does-it-really-suck-ed-dept-at-a-pivot-point-between-obama-trump/2017/01/14/191f9438-c78c-11e6-bf4b-2c064d32a4bf_story.html?utm_term=.b44f4fe2d9a8]
The proposed budget would also reshape financial aid programs that help 12
million students pay for college.
A White House official said Wednesday it would be premature to comment on
any aspect of “ever-changing internal discussion” about the president’s
budget before its publication. “The president and his Cabinet are working
collaboratively to create a leaner, more efficient government that does
more with less of taxpayers’ hard-earned dollars,” the official said.
Liz Hill, an Education Department spokeswoman, emphasized that all figures
are preliminary until officially released next week. Hill said that the
proposed budget protects special-education funding, ensures careful
stewardship of taxpayer dollars and demonstrates the administration’s
“strong commitment to ensuring the Department of Education provides more
educational options for low-income students.”
The budget proposal calls for a net $9.2 billion cut to the department, or
13.6 percent of the spending level Congress approved last month. It is
likely to meet resistance on Capitol Hill because of strong constituencies
seeking to protect current funding, ideological opposition to vouchers and
fierce criticism of DeVos, a longtime Republican donor who became a
household name during a bruising Senate confirmation battle.
Asked for comment, a spokesman for Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.),
chairman of the Senate Education Committee, referred to Alexander’s
response in March to the release of Trump’s budget outline. That statement
emphasized that while the president may suggest a budget, “under the
Constitution, Congress passes appropriations bills.”
Under the administration’s budget, two of the department’s largest
expenditures in K-12 education, special education and Title I funds to help
poor children, would remain unchanged compared to federal funding levels in
the first half of fiscal 2017. However, high-poverty schools are likely to
receive fewer dollars than in the past because of a new law that allows
states to use up to 7 percent of Title I money for school improvement
before distributing it to districts.
The cuts would come from eliminating at least 22 programs, some of which
Trump outlined in March. Gone, for example, would be $1.2 billion for
after-school programs that serve 1.6 million children, most of whom are
poor, and $2.1 billion for teacher training and class-size reduction.
[Trump budget casualty: After-school programs for 1.6 million kids. Most
are poor.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/trump-budget-casualty-afterschool-programs-for-16-million-kids-most-are-poor/2017/03/16/78802430-0a6f-11e7-b77c-0047d15a24e0_story.html?utm_term=.976a59ab44ca]
The documents obtained by The Post — dated May 23, the day the president’s
budget is expected to be released — outline the rest of the cuts, including
a $15 million program that provides child care for low-income parents in
college; a $27 million arts education program; two programs targeting
Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian students, totaling $65 million; two
international education and foreign language programs, $72 million; a $12
million program for gifted students; and $12 million for Special Olympics
education programs.
Other programs would not be eliminated entirely, but would be cut
significantly. Those include grants to states for career and technical
education, which would lose $168 million, down 15 percent compared to
current funding; adult basic literacy instruction, which would lose $96
million (down 16 percent); and Promise Neighborhoods, an Obama-era
initiative meant to build networks of support for children in needy
communities, which would lose $13 million (down 18 percent).
The Trump administration would dedicate no money to a fund for student
support and academic enrichment that is meant to help schools pay for,
among other things, mental-health services, anti-bullying initiatives,
physical education, Advanced Placement courses and science and engineering
instruction. Congress created the fund, which totals $400 million this
fiscal year, by rolling together several smaller programs. Lawmakers
authorized as much as $1.65 billion, but the administration’s budget for it
in the next fiscal year is zero.
The cuts would make space for investments in choice, including $500
million for charter schools, up 50 percent over current funding. The
administration also wants to spend $250 million on “Education Innovation
and Research Grants,” which would pay for expanding and studying the
impacts of vouchers for private and religious schools. It’s not clear how
much would be spent on research versus on the vouchers themselves.
There is currently only one federally funded voucher program, in the
District of Columbia. A recent Education Department analysis of that
program found that after a year in private school, voucher recipients
performed worse on standardized tests than their counterparts who remained
in public school.
The administration would devote $1 billion in Title I dollars meant for
poor children to a new grant program (called Furthering Options for
Children to Unlock Success, or FOCUS) for school districts that agree to
allow students to choose which public school they attend — and take their
federal, state and local dollars with them.
The goal is to do away with neighborhood attendance zones that the
administration says trap needy kids in struggling schools. The documents
cite Minneapolis (where parents can choose which city school their children
attend) and Hartford, Conn. (where students can cross city-suburban lines
to attend school) as examples.
But the notion of allowing Title I dollars to follow the student — known
as “portability” — is a controversial idea that the Republican-led Senate
rejected in 2015. Many Democrats argue that it is a first step toward
private-school vouchers and would siphon dollars from schools with high
poverty to those in more affluent neighborhoods.
Leaders of historically black colleges and universities had sought an
increase in federal funding for their institutions. The administration’s
budget proposal would hold funding flat compared to spending levels over
the first half of fiscal 2017.
[Booing students at DeVos’s commencement speech told to shut up or get
diplomas sent in mail
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2017/05/10/betsy-devos-booed-at-bethune-cookman-graduation/?utm_term=.5bbbcb745d46]
The administration is also seeking to overhaul key elements of federal
financial aid. The spending proposal would maintain funding for Pell Grants
for students in financial need, but it would eliminate more than $700
million in Perkins loans for disadvantaged students; nearly halve the
work-study program that helps students work their way through school,
cutting $490 million; take a first step toward ending subsidized loans, for
which the government pays interest while the borrower is in school; and end
loan forgiveness for public servants.
The loan forgiveness program, enacted in 2007, was designed to encourage
college graduates to pursue careers as social workers, teachers, public
defenders or doctors in rural areas. There are at least 552,931 people on
track to receive the benefit, with the first wave of forgiveness set for
October. It’s unclear how the proposed elimination would affect those
borrowers.
The administration also wants to replace five income-driven student loan
repayment plans with a single plan.
That change would likely benefit many undergraduate borrowers, who
currently can have the balance of their loan forgiven after paying 10
percent of their income for 20 years. Trump’s proposal — which makes good
on a campaign promise — would raise the maximum payment to 12.5 percent of
income, but shorten the payment period to 15 years.
The proposal is less sweet for borrowers who take out loans to earn
advanced degrees. They currently pay monthly bills capped at 10 percent of
income for 25 years. Under the new plan, they’d pay more (12.5 percent of
income) for longer (30 years).
[Here’s what the Trump higher ed plan might mean for you
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2017/05/17/trump-and-devos-plan-to-reshape-higher-education-finance-heres-what-it-might-mean-for-you/]
There were no estimates on how much the government would save by
eliminating public-service loan forgiveness, overhauling the income-based
repayment plans and ending subsidized loans.
The spending plan supports year-round Pell Grants, which allow low-income
students to use the money for three semesters of college, instead of two.
That way, students can take a full load of courses year-round and earn a
degree faster. The administration also would increase available funds for
year-round Pell by $16.3 billion over 10 years.
Still, the maximum annual award would remain flat at $5,920. And without
any directive to index the award to inflation, that ceiling might remain in
place for the foreseeable future.
Local Headlines newsletter
Daily headlines about the Washington region.
Trump is seeking an additional $158 million for salaries and expenses in
the Education Department, up 7 percent, money that according to the budget
documents would go toward loan-servicing costs, improved
information-technology security, auditing and investigations and additional
security costs for the secretary. DeVos has contracted with the U.S.
Marshals Service to provide security rather than using the in-house
security team that guarded previous secretaries.
Despite that increase, the agency workforce would decline by about 150
positions, or 4 percent.
The staffing decline at the department’s Office for Civil Rights — which
is dealing with a large increase in discrimination complaints — would be
steeper.
Trump is seeking $106.8 million for the civil rights office, unchanged
from the funding level over the first half of fiscal 2017. But — thanks to
a recent bump from Congress — the proposed total is $1.7 million less than
the office is now receiving. The spending proposal would result in the loss
of more than 40 of roughly 570 positions.
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