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Trump Dampens The Joys of Summer for Kids.

CBS News.

Trump administration freezes billions in funding for after-school and summer programs.

Day camp providers and schools say the Trump administration's funding freeze could ruin summer for low-income American families and jeopardize some after-school programs next year.

The administration is holding back over $6 billion in federal grants for after-school and summer programs, English language instruction, adult literacy and more as it conducts a review to ensure grants are aligned with President Trump's priorities.

The move creates uncertainty for states and schools as they budget for programs this summer and in the upcoming school year because they don't know if or when they'll receive the funding. Democrats say the administration is flouting the law by holding back congressionally appropriated money.

Without the funds, schools say they won't be able to provide free or affordable after-school care for low-income kids while their parents work and may not be able to hire staff to teach children who are learning English. Classes or camps underway this summer could be in jeopardy, too.

The Boys and Girls Clubs of America depend on some of this funding to run their camps and other summer programming for low-income students. If it's not restored soon, the programming could end mid-season, said Boys and Girls Club President Jim Clark.

After-school programming in the fall could also take a hit. "If these funds are blocked, the fallout will be swift and devastating," Clark said. As many as 926 Boys and Girls Clubs could close, affecting more than 220,000 kids, the group said.

Programs relying on the money 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 didn't provide a timeline and warned that "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 respond to a request for comment.

In Gadsden City Schools in Alabama, officials say they'll have no choice but to shutter their after-school program, which serves more than 1,200 low-income students, if federal funds aren't released. There's no other way to make up for the frozen federal money, said Janie Browning, who directs the program.

Families who rely on after-school programs would lose an important source of child care that keeps children safe and engaged while their parents work. The roughly 75 employees of the district's after-school programs may lose their jobs.

"Those hours between after school and 6 o'clock really are the hours in the day when students are at the most risk for things that may not produce great outcomes," Browning said. "It would be devastating if we lost the lifeline of after school for our students and our families."

Jodi Grant, executive director of the Afterschool Alliance, said withholding the money could cause lasting damage to the economy.

Some advocates fear the grants are being targeted for elimination, which could force schools to cut programs and teachers. Mr. Trump's 2026 budget proposal called on Congress to zero out all of the programs under review, signaling the administration sees them as unnecessary.

Democratic Sen. Patty Murray of Washington pressed the Trump 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.

The six grant programs under review include one known as 21st Century Community Learning Centers. It's the primary federal funding source for after-school and summer learning programs and supports more than 10,000 local programs nationwide, according to the Afterschool 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.

These programs account for over 20% of the federal money the District of Columbia receives for K-12 education, according to an analysis by the Learning Policy Institute, a think tank. California alone has over $800,000 in limbo, while Texas has over $660,000.

"Trump is illegally impounding billions of dollars appropriated by Congress to serve students this fiscal year," said Tony Thurmond, California's state superintendent, in a statement. "The Administration is punishing children when states refuse to cater to Trump's political ideology.

The loss of funds could "put several more school districts in extreme financial distress," said Chris Reykdal, superintendent of public instruction in Washington state. Districts have already adopted budgets, planned programming and hired staff, assuming they'd receive the money, Reykdal said.

If the funding freeze remains, children learning English and their parents would be especially affected. Some districts use the money to pay for summer programming designed for English learners, family engagement specialists who can communicate with parents and professional development training for staff. Rural districts would be hit the hardest.

"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."

Umatilla School District in rural eastern Oregon — with a sizable population of migrant families and students learning English — relies heavily on federal funding for its after-school and summer school programs. Superintendent Heidi Sipe says she is meeting with state officials soon to find out if the district will have to plan an early end to summer school, an option 20% of students are using. Come this fall, if federal money stays frozen, she'll have to lay off staff and eliminate after-school programs attended by around half the district's students.

"It's an essential service in our community because we don't have any licensed child care centers for school-age children," she said.

Sipe said it's particularly frustrating to deal with these funds being put into limbo because the school district was in the middle of a five-year grant period.

"It feels preventable," she said, "and it feels as though we could have done a better job planning for America's children."
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Reason10 · 70-79, M
CBS News. Communist Broadcasting Service.

NO school lunches are being cut. This whole article is a LIE.

Of course, CBS has about as much credibility as THE VIEW.

It's where they get their daily LIES from.

Next time, try a reliable source.
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@Reason10 what is your source that this didn't happen? How is this?

Several federal school lunch programs have been significantly impacted by funding cuts and program terminations, affecting both school meal programs and food banks. The USDA has cancelled funding for programs like the Local Food for Schools Cooperative Agreement Program and the Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program, which supported local food sourcing for schools and food banks. Additionally, Congress is considering further cuts to free and reduced-price school meal programs. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
Here's a more detailed breakdown:

• Cuts to Local Food Programs: The USDA has terminated funding for programs that helped schools and food banks purchase local and regional foods. This includes the Local Food for Schools program and the Local Food Purchase Assistance program, totaling over $1 billion in cuts. [1, 2, 3]
• Impact on School Meals: These cuts affect schools' ability to offer fresh, local options in school lunches, potentially impacting students' access to nutritious meals and relationships with local farmers. [2, 7]
• Potential for Further Cuts: Congress is considering additional cuts to the broader school meal programs, which could further impact access to free and reduced-price lunches for millions of students. [6]
• Funding Uncertainty: The cuts come at a time when many schools and food banks are already facing funding challenges and rely on these programs. The School Nutrition Association has expressed concern and is advocating for protection of school meal programs. [1, 7]
• Historical Context: Some news articles from the Cato Institute point out that there have been issues with mismanagement and lack of oversight in these programs, which may have contributed to the cuts. [8]

AI responses may include mistakes.

[1]https://stateline.org/2025/03/26/federal-cuts-squeeze-already-struggling-food-banks-school-lunch-programs/[2]https://www.edsurge.com/news/2025-04-28-ending-usda-programs-for-school-meals-will-impact-learning-experts-warn[3]https://stophunger.org/usda-cuts-1-billion-dollars-for-schools-and-food-banks-tcpalm/[4]https://schoolnutrition.org/sna-news/proposed-school-meal-cuts-prompt-nationwide-advocacy/[5]https://www.njsba.org/news-information/school-board-notes/u-s-department-of-agriculture-cancels-26-million-in-funding-for-local-food-for-schools-and-food-banks-across-new-jersey/[6]https://arkansasadvocate.com/2025/03/27/federal-cuts-squeeze-already-struggling-food-banks-school-lunch-programs/[7]https://schoolnutrition.org/sna-news/usda-halts-fy25-patrick-leahy-farm-to-school-grants/[8]https://www.cato.org/policy-analysis/cutting-school-food-subsidies
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@samueltyler2 Just imagine that the demonocrats had followed the law, those 25,000,000 illegal aliens would not be here and the billions wasted on their upkeep could be used to assist Americans
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JSul3 · 70-79
@Reason10
CSS News...as noted.

WLWT....WCAX....NY Times....LA Times ...EdSource... Seattle's Child...Education Week....Daily Beast....Niagra Gazette ... Politico....Newsweek.
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@JSul3 Are those the same sources that said biden was as sharp as a tack, or some other sources?
JSul3 · 70-79
@sunsporter1649 Deflection.

Your boy Trump can't answer a question from a Fox reporter who asked how long they planned to hold people in Alligator Alcatraz.
JSul3 · 70-79
@Reason10
What have you to say about this?

Tampa Times

Trump administration freezes $396M in Florida education funds
School districts were supposed to begin receiving the money on Tuesday.
Reason10 · 70-79, M
@JSul3

I'm going to be reasonable.

1. Produce the EXECUTIVE ORDER that President Trump allegedly signed which allegedly froze $360,000,000 in Florida education funds.

Do some homework. Find the order.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/executive-orders/


OR

2. Show in the Big Beautiful Bill, recently passed in the Senate where the Department Of Education has frozen that money. Oh, and remember that Washington only accounts for 7 percent of all education funding.

https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/1/text

You didn't link to the Tampa Times, so it's possible some other brain dead idiot liberal told you that, or it's possible you just made that lie up.

Produce PROOF. I gave you the sources.
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JSul3 · 70-79
@Reason10

Trump administration freezes $396M in Florida education funds
School districts were supposed to begin receiving the money on Tuesday.

By Jeffrey S. Solochek/Times staff
Published Yesterday|Updated 5 hours ago


The U.S. Department of Education sent school officials in Florida and across the nation scrambling this week as it announced plans late Monday to freeze funds that Congress approved in March to help some of the nation’s neediest students.

Florida schools were set to receive about $396 million of the $6.8 billion in federal grants — which support programs such as migrant education, after-school programs and English language instruction — as part of a scheduled distribution on Tuesday.

Across the Tampa Bay region, Hillsborough County schools were in line to get more than $15 million, Pinellas County schools around $10 million and Pasco County schools about $8.5 million. The freeze did not include the two largest grants, Title IA for low-income students and the Individuals With Disabilities Act.

Instead, superintendents and state education department leaders held a conference call to discuss next steps as they prepare for a new academic year. Districts already had begun cutting positions and programs in expectation of a lean state budget, but it had appeared the federal money was secure for now.

“We’ve got to wait and see what decisions are made,” said Bill Montford, chief executive of the Florida Association of District School Superintendents, who helped organize the call. “Who knows? The federal government may make a different decision and it may not be necessary to let people go — at least this year."

In an early version of his fiscal 2026 education budget request, President Donald Trump signaled his intention to zero out these line items as part of an effort to streamline several federal education grants into a single block states would get with fewer strict guidelines.

For English language acquisition, for instance, the administration wrote: “Parents, states and localities, not the federal government, are best suited to determine what evidence-based literacy instructional materials will improve outcomes for all students, without the unnecessary administrative burden imposed by the federal government.”

Members of Trump’s team have argued that the president does not have to spend all the money allocated by Congress. Lawsuits are expected to challenge the impoundment effort they have promoted.

Some districts have started planning for the worst-case scenario.

“They’re very worried, especially if they have to dip into reserves,” Montford said, noting that some districts pay for hundreds of positions with the federal money. “This is a serious issue, but not one that superintendents can rush into.

“If that allocation went away, all of those functions would go away,” Hendrick told the board, whose members had questioned the budget reductions put forth by staff.

The district then would have to balance out whether the federally funded positions and programs are important enough to shift money from items in other sections of the budget.

“And we don’t have a large budget to make up for it,” Hendrick said.

Caution and pessimism were common throughout Florida districts as officials weighed the possible implications. In some ways, the reaction mirrored the way districts readied themselves for a cut in state support for advanced and career education programs — they made plans to cut with contingencies to bring programs back if the money appeared.

Lawmakers backed off plans to cut that funding in the face of student and parent backlash.

Montford said incoming Education Secretary Anastasios Kamoutsas told superintendents that the state department will keep them in the loop as the federal funding situation plays out.

“I feel very good that our (Department of Education) clearly understands the challenges that our school districts have, and they’ll be working with our school districts to find a solution,” he said. “School districts are very good at making adjustments as necessary. But we’ve made so many adjustments it’s beginning to hurt more and more.”

Department spokesperson Sydney Booker said the state is monitoring the federal government’s progress reviewing the programs for which it paused funding.

“We are committed to working with each school district to minimize any impacts to Florida’s students,” Booker said, “and we are confident that the U.S. Department of Education will do what is in the best interests of students as they make final decisions regarding these funds.”


Jeffrey S. Solochek is an education reporter covering K-12 education policy and schools. Reach him at jsolochek@tampabay.com.
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@Reason10 so tell me what source do you believe?
Reason10 · 70-79, M
@samueltyler2 I work in the industry. I know the facts. Most funding for teacher salaries and other items INCLUDING FREE LUNCHES FOR KIDS WITH DEADBEAT PARENTS is raised at the COUNTY LEVEL.

The federal government accounts for only 7 percent of all education funding.

Some far left writer's OPINION does not change that fact.