By B.T. Clark
The hallways are waxed, the lesson plans ready, but Georgia schools are missing something crucial as the new academic year looms: $223.9 million in federal education dollars that should have arrived weeks ago
Why It Matters: Schools across Georgia are making emergency decisions about teacher layoffs and program cuts just as students prepare to return to classrooms, caught in a political standoff over education funding.
Unusual Allies: Both Republican State School Superintendent Richard Woods and Democratic Rep. Lucy McBath in demanding the Trump administration release nearly $7 billion in education funding that was due July 1.
“I deeply believe in fiscal responsibility, which means evaluating the use of funds and seeking out efficiencies, but also means being responsible – releasing funds already approved by Congress and signed by President Trump,” Woods said.
McBath, for her part, is leading 150 House members demanding Education Secretary Linda McMahon release the funds as soon as possible.
By The Numbers: The withheld funds represent at least 10% of federal K-12 education funding in every state, supporting critical programs from after-school activities to teacher training.