Forget Hot-Button Ed Issues — Voters Want Safe Schools and Kids Who Can Read

July 30, 2024

Wise & Siddiqi: As ESSER funds run out, districts need to consider these priorities as they plan their future budgets.

The 74 Op-Ed

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Excited graduates wearing caps and gowns walk across the stage. After exhorting speeches, auditoriums and bleachers erupt in tears, hugs and laughter as one milestone is passed and another era begins. As the nation’s school districts celebrate this transition in the lives of the Class of 2024, they are also preparing for the transition from the final year of unprecedented federal COVID relief dollars. Just as college and high school graduates have major decisions to make, so do the school leaders who educate them.

The Class of 2024 — students and their schools — began its high school and college experiences dominated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Social distancing, online learning and uprooted peer connections were markers of an unprecedented, sudden and tumultuous shift in education. In response, in 2020, Congress approved the first of three infusions of Elementary and Secondary Emergency Relief (ESSER) funds, enabling districts to invest in technology, mental health support, infrastructure improvements and greater access to tutoring and enrichment programs. Now, as that $190 billion infusion draws to a close, education leaders must plan future budgets without that assistance, and must prioritize responses to voters’ priorities for dealing with new financial constraints.

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