
Trump administration releases portion of frozen North Carolina education funding
Why it matters: The nearly $36 million in funding released will allow North Carolina's after-school and summer programs to continue operating.
The programs, which served more than 10,000 K-12 students last year, "provide critical academic support and safe environments for students, particularly those in high-poverty areas," North Carolina's Department of Public Instruction said in a statement.
Catch up quick: North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson is one of a dozen attorneys general nationwide who are suing the U.S. Department of Education for withholding more than $6 billion in education funding nationwide. Those funds were expected to be accessible July 1.
North Carolina's portion of that — more than $165 million — made up more than 10% of the state's federal education funding.
The freeze comes amid what the Trump administration's Office of Management and Budget called an "ongoing programmatic review" and pointed to initial findings that they said "show that many of these grant programs have been grossly misused to subsidize a radical leftwing agenda," Axios' Avery Lotz reported earlier this month.
Driving the news: Nearly 30 statewide full-time jobs would have been in jeopardy had the federal government not released $36 million as part of the 21st Century Community Learning Centers program, which supports academic enrichment during non-school hours, per data released by North Carolina's Department of Justice.
Wake, Durham and Charlotte-Mecklenburg school districts had not been awarded any funding under that program, according to the data.
State of play: Around $130 million in K-12 education funding remains frozen and under review, North Carolina's education department said. More than 900 jobs remain at risk.
Those funds come from four programs, which support migrant children, help students learn English, ensure the "quality and effectiveness of educators," and improve school conditions and the use of technology to improve academic achievement, according to the Learning Policy Institute, which conducts research to improve education policies.
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USA Today
6 minutes ago
- USA Today
FBI ousts more top leaders who investigated President Donald Trump, reports say
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He made headlines for resisting Trump administration demands to turn over the names of agents from around the country who participated in the sprawling Jan. 6 investigations as part of an effort to fire or force them out of bureau. 'Our collective sacrifices for those we serve is, and will always be, worth it,' Driscoll also said in his farewell note, MSNBC reported. 'I regret nothing.' Driscoll, a veteran counterterrorism agent, had recently led the bureau's Hostage Rescue Team and served as acting director in charge of the Critical Incident Response Group, which responds to fast-moving crisis situations. Also forced out were special agents Walter Giardina and Christopher Meyer, both of whom had worked on FBI cases involving Trump, the New York Times reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The Times said that Giardina's wife died last month of cancer, and that he worked on a case that sent Trump trade advisor Peter Navarro to prison. 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'I hope that what I reveal today from credible whistleblowers at the highest levels will give my Republican colleagues some pause before it's too late,' said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee. Patel was confirmed along party lines. Another veteran FBI agent, Michael Feinberg, has gone public to say he was told to resign or accept a demotion amid scrutiny of his friendship with a lead agent on the FBI's long-running Trump-Russia investigation, which looked at Kremlin interference in the 2016 election. Other agents at headquarters and field offices have been forced out, demoted or reassigned after being linked to investigations that touched on Trump. More: FBI staff ordered to reveal their role in Jan. 6 investigations by Monday The FBI Agents Association said it was 'deeply concerned by reports that FBI Special Agents − case agents and senior leaders alike − are going to be summarily fired without due process for doing their jobs investigating potential federal crimes.' 'Agents are not given the option to pick and choose their cases, and these Agents carried out their assignments with professionalism and integrity,' the association said in a statement. 'Most importantly, they followed the law.' The agents association said there is supposed to be a review process that takes place when employment actions are taken against agents, and that it was 'established so that the FBI could remain independent and apolitical.' 'FBI leadership committed − both publicly and directly to FBIAA − that they would abide by that process. 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USA Today
6 minutes ago
- USA Today
Trump greenlights Putin sit-down, even if Russian leader does not meet with Zelenskyy
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The Hill
6 minutes ago
- The Hill
Trump says Putin wants to meet with him, will do ‘whatever' to stop war
President Trump on Thursday said that Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to meet with him, adding that he's willing to do whatever it takes to stop the ongoing war in Ukraine. Trump also told reporters in the Oval Office that Putin doesn't have to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in order for him to meet with the Russian leader, while the Kremlin has said that a Trump-Putin summit could happen next week. 'No, he would like to meet with me and I'll do whatever I can to stop the killing,' Trump said. 'So last month, they lost 14,000 people— killed. Every week, is 4 or 5,000 people. So I don't like long waits. I think it's a shame. And they're mostly soldiers. They're Ukrainian and Russian soldiers and some people from the cities where, you know, missiles are locked in and you'll lose 35, 40 people a night, which is terrible.' '20,000 people are dying a month, young, generally, young people, soldiers,' he added. A top Kremlin aide earlier on Thursday said preparations are 'ongoing' for talks as soon as next week. It would be the first huddle by a U.S. president with the Russian leader since 2021. Trump is weighing whether to meet with Putin, as well as Zelensky, in the coming weeks and raised the idea of meeting with the two leaders during a call with European allies on Wednesday, a source confirmed to The Hill. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Russia had expressed an interest in meeting with Trump. On Friday, Trump is expected to impose additional sanctions on Russia, even after Steve Witkoff, the president's special envoy for peace missions, met on Wednesday with Putin in Moscow. When asked if the deadline is still standing for sanctions, Trump deferred to Putin to make the call. 'We're going to see what he has to say. That's going to be up to him,' Trump said. The president had shortened the deadline on Russia sanctions, after warning in July that the Eastern European could face 'severe' tariffs if it did not agree to a ceasefire with Ukraine within the next two months.