The Capital

Schools weigh best way to use massive federal windfall

- By Collin Binkley

With a massive infusion of federal aid coming their way, schools across the country are weighing how to use the windfall to ease the harm of the pandemic — and to tackle problems that existed long before the coronaviru­s.

The assistance approved last month totals $123 billion.

The aid will help schools reopen and expand summer programs to help students catch up on learning. It also offers a chance to pursue programs that have long been seen as too expensive, such as intensive tutoring, mental health services and major curriculum upgrades.

“This feels like a once-in-a-generation opportunit­y for us to be able to make critical investment­s,” said Nathan Kuder, chief financial officer of Boston Public Schools, which expects $275 million.

But the spending decisions carry high stakes. If important needs are overlooked

— or if the money does not bring tangible improvemen­ts — schools could face blowback from their communitie­s and from politician­s who influence their funding. At the same time, schools must be wary of dreaming too big and taking on long-term costs they cannot sustain.

Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said the assistance allows schools to “hit the reset button” and confront challenges that have long plagued the nation’s education system. He said schools can train teachers in social and emotional learning and work to close persistent racial disparitie­s in education.

“With successful implementa­tion, our students are going to have a better experience than they did before the pandemic,” Cardona said. i

Districts with higher concentrat­ions of poverty will get the largest sums. Public schools in some cities are expected to receive more than $1 billion, including Los Angeles and Philadelph­ia. The new money joins more than $67 billion made available to schools in other relief packages during the pandemic.

Schools must reserve 20% for summer programs and other efforts to address learning loss, but they expect to have flexibilit­y in how to use most of the aid.

In Tulsa, Oklahoma, where 83% of students come from low-income families, the district expects to get $120 million — nearly three times the amount it gets in federal education funding in a typical year. Along with building upgrades, the aid will help achieve a goal to provide summer programs and after-school care in every neighborho­od, officials said.

“We plan to use this moment to consider how we can bring about lasting change for our school district,” Superinten­dent Deborah Gist said.

School officials in Hartford, Connecticu­t, say they have lined up a list of “must-win” spending areas.

Superinten­dent Leslie Torres-Rodriguez said the district plans to “radically expand” learning options outside the school day, cultivate a pipeline of new teachers and expand the role of schools in their communitie­s.

 ?? RIEDEL/AP
CHARLIE ?? Hugo Bautista, a high school freshman, eats lunch Wednesday, the first day of in-person learning, separated from classmates by dividers in Kansas City, Kansas.
RIEDEL/AP CHARLIE Hugo Bautista, a high school freshman, eats lunch Wednesday, the first day of in-person learning, separated from classmates by dividers in Kansas City, Kansas.

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