Springfield News-Sun

Feds to give $4.4B to Ohio K-12 schools

American Rescue Plan funding is part of $122B for schools nationally.

- By Jeremy P. Kelley Staff Writer

Ohio will receive $4.47 billion in funding for preK-12 schools as part of the American Rescue Plan that passed Congress this month, the U.S. Department of Education announced Wednesday.

That’s a one-time payment roughly equivalent to a half-year’s worth of normal state funding for Ohio K-12 schools. No breakdown is available yet of how much each individual school will receive.

But Ohio Department of Education officials said Wednesday that allocation­s will be based on Title 1 funding formulas — like other federal relief funds in the past year — so school districts serving higher percentage­s of low-income students will get comparativ­ely larger allocation­s.

ODE also will “work with the legislatur­e to add appropriat­ions as needed,” spokeswoma­n Mandy Minick said.

A statement Wednesday from USDOE listed seven potential uses for the money, along with “additional uses allowed in the statute.”

The seven listed are:

■ COVID safety investment­s such as building ventilatio­n projects, personal protective equipment and “obtaining additional space” to ensure social distancing in classrooms;

■ Hiring additional nurses and custodial staff, to bolster school safety efforts;

■ Avoiding layoffs and/or hiring more educators to address learning loss and help with social distancing;

■ Programs to meet students’ social, emotional, mental health, and academic needs;

■ Summer, after-school, and other extended learning and enrichment programs;

■ Wi-Fi hotspots and computer devices for students and educators;

■ Efforts to enable social distancing and safety protocols on buses.

Ohio’s state Superinten­dent, Paolo DeMaria, said in addition to school reopening efforts, the Ohio Department of Education expects the money “will play a significan­t role” in schools’ efforts to make up for lost learning opportunit­ies and help students be ready for the new school year.

“Schools and districts will have several years to use these funds, so they can also contribute to fundamenta­l changes to education that can create even greater improvemen­t and outcomes for students and our state,” DeMaria said.

The money is part of $122 billion that will be distribute­d nationally, with USDOE saying states will start to receive some of the money this month. Ohio is the seventh most-populous state and will get the seventh-largest allocation. California will receive over $15 billion, while Vermont is lowest at $285 million.

“These funds from the

American Rescue Plan and the extraordin­ary steps the (USDOE) is taking to get these resources to states quickly will allow schools to invest in mitigation strategies to get students back in the classroom and stay there, and address the many impacts this pandemic has had on students,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona.

Cardona encouraged states to make sure students who have been hit hardest by COVID-19 are provided with needed resources.

There are two other funding streams for K-12 schools in the American Rescue Plan. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced that the CDC will provide $10 billion nationally to support COVID-19 screening testing for K-12 teachers, staff, and students in schools.

The plan also includes a $7.6 billion fund specifical­ly earmarked for special education, homeless students, non-public schools, Tribal educationa­l agencies, and areas such as Guam, and American Samoa.

Contact this reporter at jeremy.kelley@coxinc.com.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Ohio will receive $4.47 billion in funding for preK-12 schools as part of the American Rescue Plan that passed Congress this month, the U.S. Department of Education announced Wednesday.
CONTRIBUTE­D Ohio will receive $4.47 billion in funding for preK-12 schools as part of the American Rescue Plan that passed Congress this month, the U.S. Department of Education announced Wednesday.

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