WASHINGTON – Tucked into the $ 1.9 trillion pandemic bailout bill is a surprise coming from a Democratic Congress and a president who has long been considered an advocate of public education – nearly $ 3 billion for Private schools.
More surprising is who got it there: Senator Chuck Schumer from New York, the majority leader whose loyalty to his constituents deviated from his party’s wishes, and Randi Weingarten, the leader of one of the most powerful teachers’ unions in the country, who recognized that the Federal government was committed to helping all schools recover from the pandemic, including those who do not accept their group.
The deal, which came after Mr Schumer lobbied for the powerful Orthodox Jewish community in New York City, angered other Democratic leaders and public school attorneys who have beaten back years of efforts by the Trump administration and Congressional Republicans to get federal funds to private individuals forward schools, including in the last two coronavirus relief bills.
The Democrats had struggled against pressure from President Donald J. Trump’s Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to use pandemic relief laws to support private schools just to do it themselves.
And the offer to private schools came about even after House Democrats specifically tried to cut those funds by capping coronavirus aid to private education to about $ 200 million in the bill. Mr. Schumer struck home in the eleventh hour and staked $ 2.75 billion – about twelve times more funds than the house had allowed.
“We never expected Senate Democrats to proactively choose to push us straight down the slippery slope of private school funding,” said Sasha Pudelski, advocacy director at AASA, the School Superintendents Association, one of the groups sending letters to Congress wrote to protest the carving -from. “The floodgates are open and now, with the support of both parties, why shouldn’t private schools charge more federal money?”
Mr Schumer’s move led to significant conflict between the parties behind the scenes as Congress prepared to pass one of the most critical public education funding bills in modern history. Senator Patty Murray, the chairwoman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, reportedly was so unhappy that she advocated a last-minute language in which money would go to “non-public schools that have a significant percentage enrolled is, “stated that low-income students are those most affected by the qualifying emergency. “
“I’m proud of what the American bailout plan will bring to our students and schools, and in this case I’m glad the Democrats have better focused those resources on students who have been most harmed by the pandemic,” Ms. Murray said in one Explanation .
Jewish leaders in New York have long sought help for their sectarian schools, but resistance in the house led them to turn to Mr. Schumer, said Nathan J. Diament, the executive director of public order for the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America . who claimed that public schools had nothing to complain about.
“It’s still that 10 percent of American students are in closed schools and are just as affected by the crisis as the other 90 percent, but we’re getting a much lower percentage overall,” he said, adding, “We, I am very much grateful for what Senator Schumer did. “
Mr. Schumer has been pressured by a number of executives in New York’s private school ecosystem, including the Catholic Church.
In a statement to Jewish Insider, Mr. Schumer said: “With this fund, private schools like Yeshivas and others can receive support and services that cover Covid-related costs that they incur without taking money away from public schools. They offer their students a high quality high quality education. “
The amount of total education funding – more than double the school funds allocated in the last two aid laws combined – played a role in the concession that private schools should continue to receive billions in aid. The $ 125 billion funding for K-12 education requires districts to set aside percentages of funds to correct learning losses, invest in summer school and other programs to help students avoid educational disabilities during the pandemic can recover.
The law also targets long-underserved students, allocating $ 3 billion to special education programs under the Disability Awareness Act and $ 800 million to identifying and assisting homeless students.
“Make no mistake, this bill provides generous funding for public schools,” a spokesman for Mr Schumer said in a statement. “But there are also many private schools that serve a large percentage of low-income and disadvantaged students who also need help from the Covid crisis.”
Proponents of the move argue that it was just a continuation of the same amount given to private schools – which also had access to the state’s small business aid program at the start of the pandemic – in a total package of $ 2.3 trillion passed in December had. However, critics noted that the Republicans controlled the Senate and the Democrats had signaled that they wanted to go in a different direction. They also claim that Mr Schumer’s decision was at the expense of public education, as the version of the bill that originally passed the House allocated about $ 3 billion more to elementary and secondary schools.
Mr Schumer’s move surprised his Democratic colleagues, according to several people familiar with considerations, and spurred aggressive efforts by interest groups to reverse it. The National Education Association, the country’s largest teachers’ union and a powerful ally of the Biden government, objected to the White House, according to several people familiar with the organization’s efforts.
In a letter to lawmakers, the association’s director of government affairs wrote that, while he applauded the bill, “We wouldn’t be sure if we didn’t express our deep disappointment with the Betsy raising $ 2.75 billion for private schools DeVos era through the Senate – despite multiple opportunities and funding that were previously made available to private schools. “
Among the Democrats unhappy with Mr Schumer’s reversal was California spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi, who told him she preferred the provision that the Democrats secured in the house version, according to people familiar with their conversation. They also said that House Education Committee representative Robert C. Scott was “very upset” with both the content and process of the revision of Mr. Schumer and that his staff said he was “offended”.
Ms. Weingarten was an integral part of the influence of the Democrats, especially Ms. Pelosi, as several people said. Ms. Weingarten repeated in the speaker’s office what she said to Mr. Schumer when he made his decision: not only would she not fight the determination, but it was also the right thing to do.
Last year, Ms. Weingarten led calls to reject Ms. DeVos’s order to force public school districts to increase the amount of federal funding they share with private schools beyond what is required by law to help them recover.
At that time, private schools were going out of business every day, especially small schools that looked after mostly low-income students, and private schools were the only ones still trying to keep their doors open for face-to-face learning during the pandemic.
But Ms. Weingarten said Ms. DeVos’ guidance “donates more money to private schools and undercuts aid to the students who need it most” because the funding could have helped wealthy students.
This time Mrs. Weingarten changed her melody.
In an interview, she defended her support for the determination, saying it was different from previous efforts to fund private schools that she protested under the Trump administration, which aimed to carve out a larger percentage of the funding and promote it the private sector to use school fee vouchers. The new law also has more protective measures, such as requiring it to be spent on poor students and stipulating that private schools will not be reimbursed.
“The non-wealthy children who are in parish schools, their families have no funds and they went through Covid the same way public school children did,” Ms. Weingarten said.
“All of our children need to survive and recover from Covid, and it would be a ‘Shonda’ if we did not provide the emotional and non-religious support that all of our children need now and after this emergency,” she said and used a Yiddish word for shame.
Mr. Diament compared Mr. Schumer’s decision to Senator Edward M. Kennedy’s move more than a decade ago to include private schools in emergency funding when they served students displaced by Hurricane Katrina.
Mr Diament said he did not expect private schools to see this as a precedent for finding other forms of funding.
“In emergency situations, whether it’s a hurricane, an earthquake or a global pandemic, these are situations where we all need to be part of it,” he said. “These are exceptional situations and that’s how they should be treated.”