Barrow Announces 12th District Schools to Receive an Estimated $70.9 Million |
Recovery Act funds will help Students, Teachers, and Families Washington, D.C. - Congressman John Barrow (GA-12) announced today that an estimated $70,969,000 in emergency education funding has been released for schools in Georgia's 12th District to help save education-related jobs and maintain programs for low-income students and students with disabilities. Schools in the 12th District will receive an estimated $42,376,000 in Title I funds and $28,593,000 in IDEA funds. Nationwide, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provides $13 billion in Title I funds, which help low-income students, and $13.5 billion in IDEA funds, which help students with disabilities. This is the first of two installments of direct funding for Title I and IDEA programs that school districts will receive under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act; the second installment of funds will be released to districts this fall.
"This bill will help the kids who need it most right now, and will prepare them better for the future," said Barrow. "At times like these, we need to be investing in our kids, and that includes saving the jobs of the folks who work in our schools, not firing them."
The following school districts in Georgia's 12th District will receive Title I and IDEA funds: Title I IDEA Baldwin $1,081,000 $1,253,000 Bulloch $1,614,000 $1,784,000 Burke $1,624,000 $1,027,000 Candler $630,000 $394,000 Chatham $10,417,000 $7,974,000 Effingham $770,000 $1,628,000 Emanuel $1,650,000 $861,000 Evans $687,000 $436,000 Glascock $45,000 $80,000 Hancock $492,000 $322,000 Jefferson $1,092,000 $684,000 Jenkins $613,000 $363,000 Johnson $463,000 $386,000 Montgomery $341,000 $306,000 Richmond $16,277,000 $7,763,000 Screven $620,000 $608,000 Taliaferro $127,000 $66,000 Tattnall $1,020,000 $742,000 Toombs $1,259,000 $685,000 Treutlen $416,000 $254,000 Warren $298,000 $224,000 Washington $840,000 $753,000
In addition to the Title I and IDEA investments, the Recovery Act also created a state stabilization fund to help stabilize state and local budgets and prevent harmful cuts to education. Along with announcing the release of funding for local districts, the Obama administration also issued guidelines today to clarify how these funds should be used to help clear up recent confusion over whether the state can decide how local districts and colleges use those funds. States can now apply for this funding.
The guidelines confirm that, while states allocate the funds, it should be up to local school districts and colleges and universities to decide how to use this emergency aid, not up to states. The guidelines also reaffirm that state stabilization funds should be used for three purposes: to prevent harmful cuts to K-12 and higher education, to stave off teacher layoffs, and to modernize school facilities - which could create new jobs.
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Contact: Jane Brodsky, (202) 225-2823
Click here for a .pdf copy of this release |
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