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Senate Appropriations Committee Releases Draft Labor-HHS-Education Bill

This weekly Washington Update is intended to keep members informed on Capitol Hill activities impacting the educator preparation community. The views expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of AACTE.

This week marked the 32nd anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). This landmark civil rights legislation represents the promise of inclusion and access for individuals with disabilities across our nation. While our country has made significant progress since the law was signed over three decades ago- there is more work to do to live up to the promise of ADA.

Senate Appropriations Committee Releases Draft FY2023 Funding Bills

On Thursday, the Senate Appropriations Committee released its proposed Democratic fiscal year (FY) 2023 funding bills along with an explanatory statement and summary for each bill. The explanatory statement comes in lieu of a Committee Report and explains the intent behind the funding values and includes an overview and descriptions of each account, list of earmarks, and a programmatic funding table at the end. The Senate bills won’t be marked up, but they will serve as a starting point for negotiations in the fall.

The Senate Appropriations bill provides $83.4 billion in discretionary funding to Department of Education programs — an increase of $8.1 billion or 11% over the FY2022 levels. The 11% increase however is 4% or $3.3 billion less than the House Appropriations bill and $4.9 billion or 6% less than the President’s requested budget.

The draft Labor-HHS-Education Senate bill is similar to the House Appropriations bill with a few exceptions:

  • Less funding for Title I ($408 million less than the House bill), IDEA programs ($1.0 billion less), full-service community schools ($318 million less), a variety of educator workforce programs and earmarks ($89 million less);
  • No funding for school-based mental health services grants (House bill provides $1 billion) or a new fostering diverse schools program (House bill provides $100 million)
  • More funding than the House bill for charters ($40 million more) and school safety national activities ($60 million more), along with scattered smaller increases.

Notable funding increases in the draft bill include the following:

  • Pell Grants – matches the House bill by providing a $500 increase in the maximum grant. The bill also expands Pell grant eligibility.
  • Title I state grants – provides a $2.6 billion (15%) increase, which would be the largest single-year increase but is smaller than the increases requested by the President or in the House Committee bill.
  • IDEA grants to states – provides a $2.0 billion (15%) increase, which again
  • is less than the level in the President’s budget or the House Committee bill.

Key Programs Related to Educator Workforce

Program

Current level (2022)

2023 Request (discretionary)

2023 House Appropriations Committee

2023 Senate DRAFT Bill

IDEA Personnel Preparation

$95 M

$250 M

$250M 190

$190M

Teacher Quality Partnership Grants

$59 M

$132 M

$132M

$75M

Hawkins Centers of Excellence

$8M

$20 M

$30M

$12M

School Based Health Professionals

$0

$1 B

Funded in Safe Schools

$0

School Leader Recruitment and Support

$0

$40 M

$0

$25M

Education Innovation and Research

$234 M

$514 M

$384M

$360M

As you will notice, funding levels for key programs related to the educator workforce are lower in the Senate draft bill compared to the House Appropriations Committee bill — this is typical. The Senate generally has a lower top-line number for non-defense funding meaning across the board you will see programs take a cut. It is also important to keep in mind that these numbers are partisan, coming from Democrats. When Members of Congress return from summer recess and negotiations begin in the fall, we can expect to see these numbers change. Our advocacy efforts will be critical- we must urge Members to support investments in key programs that would support the sustainability and capacity of comprehensive educator preparation programs that are so desperately needed.

 Department of Education Prepared to Carry Out Student Loan Forgiveness for Millions of Borrowers

On Thursday, POLITICO  reported that top Department of Education officials have developed detailed plans to carry out student loan forgiveness for millions of Americans according to internal agency documents obtained by the media outlet. The documents outline how the agency would manage and operate a possible mass debt cancelation program. Department officials are reportedly prepared to provide debt relief to several million borrows for whom the agency already has income information for, within several months. Most other borrowers would apply via StudentAid.gov by self-certifying that they qualify for relief.

In a memo prepared for Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona the Department notes:

“Internal discussions have resolved most key operational and policy issues necessary for speedy implementation…potentially allowing immediate eligibility determination for millions of borrowers, the first cancellations within 45 days of announcement and millions of cancellations within 90 days.”

A spokesperson from the Department Education issued a statement saying:

“The Department’s review of broad based debt cancellation remains ongoing and no decisions have been made…We are not going to comment on any alleged internal documents or internal deliberations about hypothetical scenarios.”

The White House for their part said the Administration “is continuing to assess options for cancellation and no decision has been made.”

In the States: Military Veterans in Florida can Teach without a Bachelor’s Degree

In June, the Florida Legislature passed a bill as part of an $8.6 million package to expand career and workforce training opportunities for Veterans and their spouses. This month, the Florida Department of Education has dropped requirements for Veterans seeking to become an educator in an effort to combat the critical shortage of educators across the state. Veterans can receive a “temporary” five-year teaching certificate if they meet the following requirements:

  • At least 48 months of military service with an honorable or medical discharge.
  • At least 60 college credits with a 2.5 grade point average.
  • Passage of a Florida subject area exam for bachelor’s level subjects. For temporary certificates, these exams are available in more than 30 subject areas.
  • Employment in a Florida school district, which can include charter schools.

In an interview with K-12 Dive AACTE Vice President of Research and Policy Jacqueline Rodriguez said:

“Florida’s new policy shortcuts the preparation necessary to teach our nation’s students and shortchanges the veteran by setting them up for failure rather than success… The United States Department of Defense would not recommend that a para-educator on Friday become an officer in the military on Monday…We can all agree that there must be standards of excellence and quality assurance in every discipline.”

New Resources for Educators  

  • The House Budget Committee issued a new report that highlights policies the federal government can implement to benefit children.

  • The Biden-Harris Administration released a fact sheet in conjunction with a slew of new higher education rules that largely target the on the for-profit college industry.

  • The Learning Policy Institute is out with a new report that looks at the correlation between preschool program ratings and learning gains. The report notes that children in higher-tier programs showed more learning and development than those in lower-tier programs. Preschool children who are Black, Multiracial, or Latinx were underrepresented in higher-quality programs.

The House breaks for their summer recess today and the Senate is expected to follow next week- with Democrats hopeful that their recess will come after the passage of a new reconciliation package released this week by Senator Manchin; “The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022”.  While Washington Update typically breaks with Congress during recess you can expect to see me back in your inbox periodically throughout August reporting on education policy happenings across the states.

Until next time, take care of yourselves and each other.

See you on Twitter! Kait @brennan_kait


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