Texas schools got billions in federal pandemic relief. It is coming to an end as the school year starts. [View all]
The $43 million infusion the Port Arthur Independent School District received in federal COVID-19 pandemic relief funds accomplished more than Phyllis Geans could have ever imagined.
The money allowed the district to upgrade antiquated heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems. Teachers earned retention stipends at a time when many were leaving the profession. Students received new band instruments. An ambitious summer program taught them about photography, robots and skydiving.
We were excited, really excited, because we started thinking about things that we knew were almost impossible, said Geans, Port Arthur ISDs assistant superintendent of operations. It was unreal.
Districts like Port Arthur ISD, where roughly 85% of students are economically disadvantaged, received a level of financial support they likely wouldnt have received otherwise and they took advantage of it by investing in community health, learning, infrastructure and safety.
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The money will go away at a time when Texas schools are already struggling to keep the lights on. A number of districts are planning to enter the next school year with multimillion-dollar holes in their budgets as inflation has sent costs soaring. The Texas Legislature failed last year to approve a significant boost to the base amount of money every school receives per student an amount that hasnt changed since 2019 as lawmakers fought over whether to fund private education with taxpayer dollars. Emphasis mine.
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Just wait until the Dept of Education goes by by per Project 2025. Title One funds are essential to Texas school funding.
But nah well just raise the ceiling for property taxes, institute school vouchers, and give Elon Musk, Chevron and Amazon property tax abatement for 50 years. What could go wrong?