FY20 Funding Bill Is Finalized
On December 16, Congress released H.R.
1865, the Consolidated Appropriations Act of FY20. The bill and its provisions
fund the federal government for F720 which runs from Oct 1, 2019 thru September
30, 2020. FY20 dollars will be in schools during the 2020-2021 school year. Congress
has relied on a series of short-term continuing resolutions to keep government
funded and running since September 30, 2019. The final continuing resolution
was set to expire at midnight on December 21st meaning the timing of
the bill forced an expedited floor vote schedule in both the House and the
Senate.The House plans to pass the fiscal 2020 spending bills in two
packages on Tuesday, likely followed by Senate passage before federal funding
runs out at midnight on Friday. The President has indicated he will sign the funding
bill as it provides some funding, $1.4 billion, for the border wall and he is
expected to try and shift cash from other funding streams to bolster funding
for the border wall.
Overview: H.R. 1865
provides $1.4 trillion for FY20. The
more than 2,000-page bill will appropriate $738 billion in fiscal 2020 funding
for the defense discretionary spending and $632 billion for non-defense discretionary
spending. Specific to education the bill provides $40.1 billion for K-12 education programs which is an
increase of $1.2 billion above the 2019 enacted level and $5.9 billion above
the President’s budget request. The bill rejects the draconian cuts to
critical programs proposed by the Trump Administration as well as their continued
efforts to further advance their flawed privatization agenda.
Program
Specific Details:
K12 Programs
- ESSA Title I: $450m increase to $16.3 b
- ESSA Title II: $76m increase to 2.1b (first
increases in 6 years)
- ESSA Title III: $50m increase to $787 (first
increase in 5 years)
- ESSA Title IV: $40 m increase to $1.2b
- IDEA State Grants (Part B): $417m increase
to $13.9b (3% increase)
- Impact Aid: $40m increase, to $1.4b
- 21st Century Community Learning
Centers: $28 m increase, to $1.2b
- REAP: $5m increase to $186m
- Career and Technical Education State
Grants: $20m increase to $1.28b
- Homeless Youth/Children: $8 m increase to 105m
- School Safety National Activities: $10m
increase to $105m
- A new Social-Emotional Learning initiative would get $123 to support SEL and "whole child" approaches to education.
Early Education
- Head Start: $550m increase to $10.6b
- Child Care and Development Block Grant
(CCDBG): $550m increase to $5.8b
Funding and Policy Beyond The Labor-Health-Education
Bill
- STOP School Violence Act Grants: $25m
increase to $125m
- Secure Rural Schools/Forest Counties: The
bill reauthorizes and provides two years of funding for the SRS program for FY19
and FY20
- DC Voucher: Reauthorizes the program for 4
additional years
- Raises the age for purchasing tobacco products
including e-cigarettes to 21 from 18.
- Provides $12.5m in funding for researching
gun violence prevention
- Adequately funds the Census to ensure it
can be properly administered
- Contains policy language instructing CMS
and ED to work together to reduce administrative barriers for providing health
services in and in coordination with schools and provide technical assistance
to assist with billing and payment administration for Medicaid services in
schools.
- Repeal of the Cadillac tax in the Affordable Care Act.