logo
Billions in grants for summer school, English instruction delayed during Trump administration review

Billions in grants for summer school, English instruction delayed during Trump administration review

Associated Press6 hours ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is withholding more than $6 billion in federal grants for afterschool and summer programs, English language instruction, adult literacy and more as part of a review to ensure grants align with President Donald Trump's priorities.
The move leaves states and schools in limbo as they budget for programs this summer and in the upcoming school year, introducing new uncertainty about when — or if — they will receive the money. It also sets the stage for a clash with Democrats, who say the administration is flouting the law by holding back money Congress appropriated.
Without the money, schools say they won't be able to provide free or affordable afterschool care for low-income kids while their parents work, and they may not be able to hire staff to teach children who are learning English.
Programs that rely on the funding were expecting it to be distributed July 1, but an Education Department notice issued Monday announced the money would not be released while the programs are under review. The department did not provide a timeline and warned 'decisions have not yet been made' on grants for the upcoming school year.
'The Department remains committed to ensuring taxpayer resources are spent in accordance with the President's priorities and the Department's statutory responsibilities,' Education Department officials wrote in the notice, which was obtained by The Associated Press.
The department referred questions to the Office of Management and Budget, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Some advocates fear the grants are being targeted for elimination, which could force schools to cut programs and teachers. Trump's 2026 budget proposal called for Congress to zero out all of the programs under review, signaling the administration sees them as unnecessary.
Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., pressed the administration to spend the money as Congress intended.
'Every day that this funding is held up is a day that school districts are forced to worry about whether they'll have to cut back on afterschool programs or lay off teachers instead of worrying about how to make sure our kids can succeed,' Murray said in a statement.
A national organization for afterschool programs called the department's action a 'stunning betrayal.'
'Withholding these funds will cause lasting harm to students and families, and to our education system, our future workforce, and our economy,' said Jodi Grant, executive director of the Afterschool Alliance.
The six grant programs under review includes one known as 21st Century Community Learning Centers. It's the primary federal funding source for afterschool and summer learning programs and supports more than 10,000 local programs nationwide, according to the alliance. Every state runs its own competition to distribute the grants, which totaled $1.3 billion this fiscal year.
Also under review are $2 billion in grants for teachers' professional development and efforts to reduce class size; $1 billion for academic enrichment grants, often used for science and math education and accelerated learning; $890 million for students who are learning English; $376 million to educate the children of migrant workers; and $715 million to teach adults how to read.
California's education agency said it was notified Monday that it wouldn't be receiving money from those programs.
'Trump is illegally impounding billions of dollars appropriated by Congress to serve students this fiscal year,' Tony Thurmond, California's state superintendent, said in a statement. 'The Administration is punishing children when states refuse to cater to Trump's political ideology.'
The administration had signaled its desire to cut much of the money in an April letter to Sen. Susan Collins, chair of the Senate Committee on Appropriations.
In that letter, Russell Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, said cutting money for teaching kids to speak English would help 'end overreach from Washington and restore the rightful role of State oversight in education.'
'They're trying to send a message,' said Amaya Garcia, who oversees education research at New America, a left-leaning think tank. 'They don't believe that taxpayer funding should be used for these children.'
___
The Associated Press' education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UPenn reaches agreement with Trump administration on transgender athletes and erases Lia Thomas' records
UPenn reaches agreement with Trump administration on transgender athletes and erases Lia Thomas' records

CNN

time15 minutes ago

  • CNN

UPenn reaches agreement with Trump administration on transgender athletes and erases Lia Thomas' records

The University of Pennsylvania will block transgender athletes from female sports teams and erase the records set by swimmer Lia Thomas as part of an agreement with the federal government, the Department of Education said. The agreement comes as part of the Trump administration's broader restrictions on transgender people, as it steps up its efforts to ban transgender athletes from competing in women's sports nationwide and serving in the military. Thomas, a UPenn graduate, won the 2022 NCAA championship in the women's 500-yard freestyle. Thomas is a transgender woman. 'Penn has always followed — and continues to follow — Title IX and the applicable policy of the NCAA regarding transgender athletes,' UPenn President J. Larry Jameson said in a news release Tuesday. In February, the NCAA announced an overhaul of its transgender athlete policy to limit transgender participation in women's sports in response to Trump's executive order. The White House in March cut off $175 million in federal funds for Penn related to the transgender athlete issue. It's not clear whether that money will be restored. 'Penn will continue to adhere to these new rules,' Jameson added. Thomas' records have been removed from a UPenn list of all-time school records in women's swimming. A note at the bottom of the document reads, 'Competing under eligibility rules in effect at the time, Lia Thomas set program records in the 100, 200 and 500 freestyle during the 2021-22 season.' CNN has reached out to the NCAA for comment regarding the agreement. The US Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights said in a statement Tuesday that an investigation found UPenn violated Title IX by 'permitting males to compete in women's intercollegiate athletics and to occupy women-only intimate facilities.' Title IX prohibits sex-based discrimination at any academic institution that receives federal funding. 'We will review and update the Penn women's swimming records set during that season to indicate who would now hold the records under current eligibility guidelines,' Jameson said. UPenn also agreed to issue a statement specifying that it 'will adopt biology-based definitions for the words 'male' and 'female' pursuant to Title IX' and consistent with two executive orders on transgender athletes from President Donald Trump, according to the Department of Education. The school says it will also apologize to female student athletes who lost to Thomas during the 2021-2022 swim season. 'We recognize this and will apologize to those who experienced a competitive disadvantage or experienced anxiety because of the policies in effect at the time,' Jameson said. In February, Trump signed an executive order titled 'Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports' with the goal of banning transgender women from competing in women's sports. 'With this executive order, the war on women's sports is over,' the president said during a signing ceremony surrounded by dozens of women and some young girls in athletic uniforms. Some critics claim transgender athletes have an unfair advantage in sports, but that's not what the research shows. While research is limited and ongoing, a 2017 review in the peer-reviewed journal Sports Medicine found 'no direct or consistent research' showing trans people have an athletic advantage. A more recent October 2023 review of the research concluded that sex differences do develop following puberty, but many are 'reduced, if not erased, over time by gender affirming hormone therapy.' Physical attributes that could work in a trans girl's favor, like height or limb length, for example, appear to be 'less malleable,' the study said, but it also pointed out that there are no efforts to restrict cisgender athletes who are taller than average or exceptionally gifted physically in any other way. The executive order is two-pronged, leaning on compliance with Title IX, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in education programs or activities that receive funding from the federal government, as well as federal engagement with the private sector. Ahead of the signing, a White House official said that the new action would take the opposite position on Title IX from the Biden administration, which established a rule that schools are violating Title IX when they ban transgender students from participating on sports teams. The Trump administration's position on Title IX, the official previously said, is 'if you're going to have women's sports, if you're going to provide opportunities for women, then they have to be equally safe, equally fair, and equally private opportunities, and so that means that you're going to preserve women's sports for women.' Thomas became the first transgender athlete to win an NCAA Division I title in 2022 after finishing first in the women's 500-yard freestyle event. A former swimmer on the men's team at UPenn, Thomas has come to personify the ongoing debate on trans women's participation in sports and the balance between inclusion and fair play. Thomas previously told the SwimSwam podcast she realized she was trans the summer of 2018, but kept it to herself, wary that coming out would take away her ability to swim. 'The very simple answer is that I'm not a man,' she told Sports Illustrated in March. 'I'm a woman, so I belong on the women's team. Trans people deserve that same respect every other athlete gets.' In February, three former athletes at UPenn's women's swimming program sued the school, the Ivy League Council of Presidents and athletics organizations, claiming they violated federal law to allow Thomas to compete against them. Thomas has not commented publicly on the latest lawsuit. Despite her expressed intention to keep swimming competitively after college, Thomas has been barred from international events by the rules of World Aquatics, which only qualify transgender athletes who have not experienced biological puberty. The Court of Arbitration for Sport denied Thomas' challenge to the rule, making her ineligible for most elite competitions, including the 2024 Olympics. This story has been updated with additional details.

FBI, DHS warn of lone wolf attacks on July 4 in NYC and San Francisco
FBI, DHS warn of lone wolf attacks on July 4 in NYC and San Francisco

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

FBI, DHS warn of lone wolf attacks on July 4 in NYC and San Francisco

NEW YORK — The FBI and Department of Homeland Security have said lone wolf attacks pose the biggest threats to July 4 celebrations this year in New York City and San Francisco. Intelligence bulletins sent out ahead of the holiday warn of copycat attacks and homegrown extremists, according to ABC News. 'We are concerned about the potential threat of copycat attacks inspired by the 2025 New Year's Day vehicle-ramming attack in New Orleans and continued messaging (from foreign terrorist organizations, or FTOs) calling for attacks against Western targets,' two such bulletins read. Officials warn that attackers in New York City and San Francisco could be motivated by a broad-range of grievances, with particular concern over outrage tied to the conflict between Israel and Hamas. 'Of these actors, U.S.-based violent extremists supporting FTOs and (domestic violent extremists) not linked to FTOs represent two of the most persistent threats,' the bulletins say. 'Lone offenders, in particular, remain a concern due to their ability to often avoid detection until operational and to inflict significant casualties.' The agencies specifically cite worries of 'malicious actors and violent extremists' entering July 4 event areas and First Amendment-protected demonstrations with 'weapons, chemical irritants, bodily fluids or other hazardous materials.' Drones could also pose a threat, authorities say. The warning comes weeks after an Egyptian man in Boulder, Colorado used Molotov cocktails to attack a march in support of Israeli hostages, leading to at least one death. A lone shooter killed seven and wounded dozens of others during a 2022 Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, Illinois, while the New Year's Day attack in New Orleans claimed the lives of 14 victims. _____

US halts some weapons shipments to Ukraine, White House says
US halts some weapons shipments to Ukraine, White House says

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US halts some weapons shipments to Ukraine, White House says

The US has halted some weapons shipments to Kyiv, the White House has said, as Russia's war against Ukraine has intensified. The decision was taken "to put America's interests first" and followed a Department of Defense review of US "military support and assistance to other countries", White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said on Tuesday. The US has sent tens of billions of dollars in military aid to Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022, leading some in the Trump administration to voice concerns that US stockpiles are too low. The Ukrainian government has not commented on the announcement. US officials did not immediately say which shipments were being halted. Air defence missiles and precision munitions are understood to be among the weapons affected, according to the Reuters news agency. A US official said the move was based on concerns about US military stockpiles falling too low, the BBC's US media partner CBS News has reported. The Department of Defense "continues to provide the President with robust options to continue military aid to Ukraine... At the same time, the Department is rigorously examining and adapting its approach to achieving this objective while also preserving U.S. forces' readiness for Administration defense priorities," Elbridge Colby, the US Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, said. "The strength of the United States Armed Forces remains unquestioned - just ask Iran," Kelly added, referring to US strikes at three Iranian nuclear sites last month. The decision comes shortly after US President Donald Trump met with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky at the Nato summit in the Netherlands last week. On that occasion, Trump said US officials "are going to see if we can make some of them available" when asked about providing extra Patriot anti-missile systems to Ukraine. Referring to his conversation with Zelensky, Trump said: "We had a little rough sometimes, but he couldn't have been nicer." The two had a heated confrontation in the Oval Office in March this year. Afterwards, Trump said he was pausing military aid to Ukraine that had been earmarked by the previous Biden administration. It also said it would pause intelligence sharing with Ukraine. Both pauses were subsequently lifted. In late April, the US and Ukraine signed a deal that would give the US access to Ukraine's mineral reserves in exchange for military assistance. The US military aid suspension comes as Russia stepped up its war against Ukraine. Over the weekend, Russia launched one of its largest aerial attacks on Ukraine since the start of the war, using more than 500 different types of weapons, including drones, ballistic and cruise missiles. On Tuesday, three people were killed in a Ukrainian attack on a Russian factory in Izhevsk, more than 1,000km (620 miles) from the border with Ukraine. Moscow currently controls about 20% of Ukrainian territory, including the Crimea peninsula annexed in 2014. 'They took shrapnel from my heart' – the magnets saving lives in Ukraine 'Mariupol is diseased': Residents deny Russian claims occupied city returning to normal

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store