The Day

State to use coronaviru­s aid to expand, revamp summer learning

- By STEN SPINELLA Day Staff Writer

“With jobs returning, workers coming back into an office setting, this summer is a really important time to make sure parents have a safe place to send their kids.”

SEN. CHRIS MURPHY D-CONN.

Connecticu­t will be using $11 million from the American Rescue Plan to fund summer learning program opportunit­ies.

Officials, including Sen. Richard Blumenthal, Sen. Chris Murphy and Gov. Ned Lamont, among others, held a news conference about the initiative Wednesday. They say the funding is intended to close the learning gap students have faced because of the virtual learning necessitat­ed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There’s so much uncertaint­y for parents right now on what programs are going to be open and available and whether they’re going to be able to afford to send their kids to good-quality summer programs,” Murphy said. “With jobs returning, workers coming back into an office setting, this summer is a really important time to make sure parents have a safe place to send their kids.”

Funding will be provided through a competitiv­e grant process. The state is offering either expansion grants, which are smaller and targeted toward local community organizati­ons that already work closely with students and their families, or innovation grants, which will go toward programs with regional or statewide impact. Expansion grants go up to $25,000 and innovation grants up to $250,000.

Chris Soto, director of innovation and partnershi­ps for the state De

partment of Education, said the department is going to act as the fiduciary in distributi­ng grants.

The $11 million is part of the American Rescue Plan that was recently passed, Soto said, and is a portion of the federal funding allocated to the state Department of Education.

Blumenthal said the money will be used in part to address racial disparitie­s. “One of the great points about this program is that it will target those underserve­d communitie­s of color because they have seen twice the death rates and half the vaccinatio­n rates,” he said.

Soto said expansion grants could apply to Parks and Recreation and YMCA programs, among others, and could possibly expand the number of children they serve. Innovation grants are “looking at these bold initiative­s that summer programs maybe couldn’t do in the past because they didn’t have enough money.”

Lamont said he hoped some towns and cities would be able to match money provided by the state and increase the impact of the initiative.

Michele Rulnick, president and CEO of the Middlesex YMCA, and Michelle Doucette Cunningham, executive director of the Connecticu­t After School Network, said staffing for summer programs will be a challenge.

But, Soto said, the state is working with institutio­ns of higher education to try and organize and deploy groups of college students for summer programs. Speakers at the news conference said there will be plenty of job opportunit­ies for college and high school students as part of the $11 million.

The state Department of Education will release more informatio­n about the grant applicatio­n process in coming days, according to the governor’s office.

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