At one of his trademark elementary school photo ops earlier this year, President Bush said his
administration was pumping money into America’s schools like never before. “The federal government
is sending checks at record amounts,” he announced. In fact, Bush’s 2005 budget provides the smallest
increase in education funding since 1996; it also sends 38 federal education programs to the chopping
block, for a total of $1.4 billion in cuts (see sampling below). Even the president’s signature
education initiative, the No Child Left Behind Act, falls far short of the funding Bush promised
for it—one reason why legislators in at least 17 states have endorsed bills protesting the
law.
PROGRAM |
PROPOSED CUT/ |
WHAT IT DOES |
$9.4 billion |
Over the past four years, Bush has allocated $30 billion less than Congress authorized for the law, which requires increased testing and penalizes schools where scores don’t improve. Programs for disadvantaged students take the hardest hit; the budget leaves them underfunded by $7.2 billion. |
|
$247 million |
Eliminates program that teaches parents and children in poor families to read; in 2002, Bush praised Even Start’s work as “incredibly important.” |
|
$5 million |
Eliminates program to help at-risk students. Under No Child Left Behind, schools are penalized if students drop out. |
|
$11 million |
Eliminates program for gifted students who are minorities, disabled, or speak little English. |
|
$10 million |
Eliminates program that brings computers to places where kids don’t have access to technology, such as housing projects. |
|
$17 million |
Eliminates program. |
|
$316 million |
Cuts 20 percent of federal funding for job-training programs. |
|
$35 million |
Eliminates program. |
|
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