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Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund

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Government program created in response to COVID-19
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(July 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

TheElementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund, also known asESSER.[1] is a $190 billion program created by theU.S. federal government'seconomic stimulus response bills, theCoronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act),Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, theAmerican Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARP Act), passed by the116th and117th U.S. Congress. Originally created under the CARES Act to assist schools with creating healthy learning environments, return students to classrooms, and address local needs,[2] the ESSER fund was bolstered twice with additional funds in the CRRSA Act, known as ESSER 2.0,[3] as well as the ARP Act, known as ESSER 3.0.[4]

Background

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Timeline of bills

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As schools began to close in response to theCOVID-19 pandemic in the United States, U.S. lawmakers looked to provide funding to make sure students would return to classrooms quickly and safely. On March 25, 2020,Idaho became the lastU.S. state to close public school buildings,[5] leaving all public schools in the nation closed. Just two days after the Idaho closures, the U.S. federal government passed the CARES Act, which started multiple programs to offer assistance to employers, workers, andpublic education. The 116th Congress allocated $13.2 billion in relief funds from the CARES Act to be directed to K-12 public education across the country, through the new program called the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief fund (ESSER).[1] These billions of dollars were to be sent toState Education Agencies, which would then allot eachschool district an amount based on federal guidelines.

In a second stimulus bill passed on December 27, 2020, the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act, provided an additional $54.3 billion in relief funds to K-12 public education.[1] This second round of education relief funding was called "ESSER 2.0" by theU.S. Department of Education. A third round of relief funding, ESSER 3.0, sent $122 billion to K-12 public education on March 11, 2021 through the American Rescue Plan Act signed by PresidentJoe Biden. In total, $190 billion in relief fund was sent to K-12 education in response to the pandemic, more than three times what the federal government annually spends on education.[6]

Funding allocations

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The amount each state received in federal funding widely varies. Including ESSER 1, 2.0, and 3.0 funds, total relief funding allocations ranged from $471,572,928 for Wyoming[7] to $23,436,636,090 for California[8]

The federal government set up a dashboard that provides how much ESSER funding was allocated to each state through the Education Stabilization Fund dashboard.[9] The dashboard also provides the amount each state has spent, which is updated on a monthly basis.

Use of funds

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The federal government provided guidance through theU.S. Department of Education on how state and local education agencies (school districts) should use the relief funds. Recognizing that school districts have unique needs, the guidance provided wide flexibility on how funds could be spent, through twelve broad areas of uses.[10] Approved uses include addressing local needs, approved uses through previous non-relief federal funding, and using funds to maintain staffing levels.

Due to the broad guidance of acceptable use of funds, studies have shown public school districts have spent relief dollars on a wide array of initiatives from increasing staff sizes, building new or renovating current buildings, providing stipends and bonuses to staff, technology, and student mental health.[11]

However, because of the broad acceptable use of funds, some school districts have received criticism for using relief funds on projects that do not relate to learning loss or the pandemic. Notably, a school district in Wisconsin used 80% of their relief funds to construct new football fields with synthetic turf and another in Texas spent funds on an urban bird sanctuary.[12] The federal government is also aware of fraud in the ESSER program. Due to the large amount of funds and lack of specified uses, fraud is a concern and questions have been raised for private contracts. TheMetro Nashville Public Schools paid for a $14 million dollar contract with relief funding to a newly created private entity.[13] In the contract, federal funds were used to build a two-page website with basic pandemic information at the cost of nearly $2 million dollars. Additional purchases in the contract paid over $4,000 an hour to an employee for information technology services.[14]

The White House chief coordinator of for stimulus spending told journalists that "There is no question that immense fraud took place", in relation to the federal relief programs,[15] though state education agencies have provided some oversight of the funding by having to approve school district funding plans before money has been spent.[2] Even with this oversight, reports have published multiple spending items that have little relation to the pandemic or learning loss, including budgeting relief funds on walk-in coolers, retractable bleachers, administrator travel, and imitation cash and coins.[16]

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References

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  1. ^abc"Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund".Office of Elementary and Secondary Education.
  2. ^ab"Frequently Asked Questions about the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ESSER Fund)"(PDF).Oese.ed.gov. Retrieved24 July 2022.
  3. ^"FACT SHEET : ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOL EMERGENCY RELIEF FUND II : CORONAVIRUS RESPONSE AND RELIEF SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2021"(PDF).Oese.ed.gov. Retrieved24 July 2022.
  4. ^"U.S. Department of Education Announces Distribution of All American Rescue Plan ESSER Funds and Approval of All 52 State Education Agency Plans | U.S. Department of Education".Ed.gov.
  5. ^"The Coronavirus Spring: The Historic Closing of U.S. Schools".Education Week. July 2, 2020.
  6. ^"K-12 School Spending Up 4.7% in 2019 From Previous Year".Census.gov.
  7. ^"Wyoming - Education Stabilization Fund".Covid-relief-data.ed.gov.
  8. ^"California - Education Stabilization Fund".Covid-relief-data.ed.gov.
  9. ^"Education Stabilization Fund".Covid-relief-data.ed.gov. Retrieved24 July 2022.
  10. ^"Certification and Agreement for Funding under the Education Stabilization Fund Program Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ESSER Fund)"(PDF).Oese.ed.gov. Retrieved24 July 2022.
  11. ^"How Schools Are Spending Unprecedented Education Relief Funding".Ncsl.org.
  12. ^"School districts are wasting COVID relief funds".Thehill.com. 7 November 2021.
  13. ^Lanier, Ryan (7 September 2022)."Report Exposes Misspent COVID Relief Funds in Tennessee Schools".Citizens Against Government Waste.
  14. ^"EXCLUSIVE: A COVID money grab? New details reveal Meharry subsidiary charged MNPS nearly double for thermal screeners".Mainstreet-nashville.com. Archived fromthe original on 2022-07-15. Retrieved2022-07-15.
  15. ^Tony Romm (2022-05-16) [2022-02-17]."'Immense fraud' creates immense task for Washington as it tries to tighten scrutiny of $6 trillion in emergency coronavirus spending".The Washington Post. Washington, D.C.ISSN 0190-8286.OCLC 1330888409.[please check these dates]
  16. ^"Federal Funding Fallout"(PDF).beacontn.org. Retrieved2 Nov 2025.
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