For Immediate Release
The Network for Public Education Applauds President Biden’s FY 2025 Education Budget
Given the mandated fiscal restraints, the White House has presented a responsible budget with increases to programs that best serve American children.
Contact: Carol Burris
cb*****@ne***********************.org
(646) 678-4477
The Network for Public Education (NPE) applauds President Biden’s Fiscal Year 2025 budget for the U.S. Department of Education. At a time when all federal agencies are fiscally restrained, the budget adds welcome increases to programs that benefit American children.
According to NPE’s Executive Director Carol Burris, “This budget is the mirror opposite of budget proposals by the present House leadership that slash funding to children served by critical programs like Title I while proposing an increase to the already bloated Federal Charter School Programs.”
Highlights of the President’s Fiscal Year 2025 budget include:
- An increase of $200 million for Title I, which provides supplemental financial assistance to schools with a high percentage of children from low-income families.
- An increase of $200 million to IDEA to support the needs of students with disabilities.
- An additional $50 million for grants to full-service Community Schools (FSCS).
Building on the recent State of the Union Address, the budget also includes more funding for high-quality learning time, such as high-dose tutoring, preschool grants, career and technical education, and mental health services in schools. It also includes additional funds for programs to increase the number of teachers at a time of unprecedented teacher shortages.
The Federal Charter School Program (CSP), which has seen a decrease in applications since 2016, was cut by $40 million. In its rationale, the Department notes that both State Entities and Charter Management Organizations did not deliver the number of schools promised in their applications.
The Network for Public Education fully supports the decreased funding for the CSP program, which has far outlived its usefulness. The growth in the demand for charter schools during the Bush and Obama years has ended. As the program rapidly expanded, so did the opportunity for grift and fraud. “The Department’s recent demand that the IDEA charter chain return $28 million is just the latest example of how the CSP has been abused,” said Burris. This is the first time an administration has recommended a decrease in the CSP since the program began.
We thank the President and Secretary Cardona for preparing a sound budget that puts students first in a time of fiscal restraint.
The Network for Public Education is a national advocacy group whose mission is to preserve, promote, improve, and strengthen public schools for current and future generations of students.
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