K-12 Schools Crippled by Covid Cash
Inflation and expiring funds push public education into financial chaos.

Calls for more public school spending are growing louder in states like Texas, Pennsylvania, and New York. "You will see terrible cuts," warned Texas State Representative Jon Rosenthal, who is leading a group of Democratic lawmakers demanding that Gov. Greg Abbott call a special session to boost education funding in the state.
Public school budgets are a mess heading into next school year but it's not for a lack of dollars—President Joe Biden's COVID-19 windfall for public schools is backfiring. During the pandemic, Congress doled out $190 billion in K-12 relief aid, which created a fiscal cliff and helped fuel inflation that's now eating into school districts' budgets.
The latest federal data from the U.S. Census Bureau show that K-12 spending hit record highs in 2022. On average, public schools received $18,911 per student, with New York leading the country ($35,902 per student), followed by New Jersey ($29,019 per student), Connecticut ($28,363 per student), Vermont ($27,338 per student), and Pennsylvania ($24,917 per student). For its part, Texas spent $14,696 per student—up 16.8% in real terms since 2002.
But the fiscal waters are getting choppy for public schools. Between 2020 and 2022, inflation-adjusted funding increased by $1,300 per student, but nearly all of this—$1,245 per student—was attributed to a temporary spike in federal dollars.
For public schools that used the one-time funding to add staff, increase salaries, or plug budget holes—things experts repeatedly warned against—the fiscal reckoning has arrived as federal relief aid will expire later this year.
"It is no exaggeration to say that school finance is at an inflection point," wrote Marguerite Roza of Georgetown University's Edunomics Lab. With the National Center for Education Statistics projecting enrollment to keep falling until at least 2030, widespread school closures are on the horizon and already underway in Seattle, Phoenix, San Antonio, and other cities.
But the bigger story is how much inflation has eaten into state and local funding, which account for the lion's share of K-12 dollars. In the 2022 school year, the average monthly price level was 9.6 percent higher than just two years earlier—enough to negate substantial increases by state legislatures.
Between 2020 and 2022, non-federal funding increased by $1,485 per student nominally but only $55 per student when adjusted for inflation. In comparison, non-federal funding went up nominally by $1,204 per student between 2018 and 2020—the two years before COVID-19— resulting in a $769 per student bump after adjusting for inflation. If inflation had stayed at the pre-pandemic level, public schools would have had roughly $938 per student in additional funding growth.
But don't feel too bad for public schools—they're getting what their unions lobbied for.
Congress allocated $190 billion in federal K-12 relief aid in three separate bills. By the time Biden took office in January 2021, the first two packages—totaling $67.5 billion—had already been delivered to school districts, which research shows was enough to reopen public schools safely.
But at the urging of groups like the National Education Association, National School Boards Association, and American Federation of Teachers (AFT), Biden signed his $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan in March 2021, which included an additional $122 billion for K-12 education.
"The relief built into the American Rescue Plan [ARPA] is on its way because of hardworking advocates like union members and their coalition partners, who relentlessly called legislators, wrote petitions and led campaigns to articulate the need and provide help to the American people," boasted AFT.
Many economists—including former Barack Obama advisor Larry Summers—warned about ARPA's fiscal impacts, but teachers' unions and other interest groups ignored their calls. While it's difficult to pinpoint ARPA's effect on price levels, there is consensus that it helped bring inflation to its highest level in decades. And with K-12 relief dollars spent on things like electrifying bus fleets, football stadium upgrades, and social-emotional learning, it's also safe to say that public schools didn't need these dollars in the first place.
ARPA's legacy will be the financial instability left in its wake for public schools. In the years ahead, they'll grapple with the consequences of their pandemic spending decisions and the rampant inflation they lobbied for. In the long run, public schools would have been better off without Biden's $122 billion gift to the teacher's unions.
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End all coerced funding of the public education system immediately.
What's your alternative to public schools? Universal private school vouchers? That would still be "coerced funding" of public education, if so. It would just be that there wouldn't be any government-run schools. (I know that sounds like utopia to a lot of people around here.)
End all coerced funding. Let individual households figure out how to address their situation.
End compulsory education.
Agree
There is compulsory education? I gaurentee you there is no education happening in k-12
That would mean that the poor and lower income parents would not be able to afford even an average quality education for their children. That sounds great if your goal is to have a permanent underclass.
And before you say "money in education doesn't equal quality," I would ask why every list of top private schools in a city are the ones that charge the most tuition? I would agree that education spending or tuition aren't always reflective of quality, but a strong correlation should be totally expected, just like in anything else.
There already is a permanent underclass.
Would ending public funding of K-12 education increase social mobility or reinforce the low status of that permanent underclass, then? Same question on ending compulsory education.
I see what you all would call the far left saying that the right's push to loosen child labor laws, along with their education reforms like vouchers and ideas like ending compulsory education, are part of a plan. That plan is to keep the poor 'in their place' like some right-wing thinkers in the 50s and earlier argued for. Basically, the idea was that we would always need people to be janitors and occupy other undesirable low-skill jobs, so it is better to just build the system to produce that outcome.
I think that it is partisan fantasy to ascribe that kind of bad motive to political opponents. It is reading too much into things, but ending compulsory education, weakening child labor laws, and ending public funding of education sure would result in that kind of society.
There are good reasons why no modern wealthy nation does without compulsory education (at least up to middle teen years, like the U.S., where kids must be receiving education full time until they are 16 in most states). Same thing with public funding for education and restrictions on child labor. Before advocating for something this radical, maybe see if there is anywhere desirable to live in the modern world where it works.
You don't realize what happens in public schools, do you?
why should choldren be forced to iteract with bullies?
I don’t give a shit. I’m not a socialist and being forced to fund a fund a political daycare facility that cosplays poorly as education is theft. I’m neither compelling nor asking them to fund my activities.
^ This is the lefty shitbag who supports murder as a preventative measure against, well he's not smart enough to figure that out:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
If you think you can end something based on voting you’re a fucking idiot. This gov is beholden only to their rich donors. They have made it abundantly clear that the people no longer are even considered. This has been going on for decades.
It’s also clear that this strategy of flooding the markets with money was intentional to cause inflation. Not sure what their end goal is but everyone saw this coming yet they did it anyway. Of course, we now know Covid was released on us, so it makes since this was in the planning for years.
Dumb asses couldn’t run a lemonade stand.
The problem is not money, the problem is policy.
Step one, execute all Marxists that work in the public sector.
'"You will see terrible cuts," warned Texas State Representative Jon Rosenthal'
Um, yay?
Not sure why they had to hire more people when they didn't go into work? This spending just like the money inflow they got was reckless and it doesn't seem like they have a clue either on how to run on a budget.
They could try producing well-educated students. Then maybe taxpayers wouldn't mind paying high prices so much.
$35,902 per student.
Don't tell me the free-market couldn't compete.
For an in-house teacher (like day-care) and a class of 30 that's $1M/yr revenue salary.
That way of looking at school funding is never reflective of what it actually costs to run schools. Say a private school in NY had tuition that was half of that. Would you expect it to have 30 kids in a single room with a teacher making $500k a year?
Looking it up, I quickly found that half of that is a little below the average for the state. Search for the best private schools in New York, and you'll see elite private schools with tuition over $50k.
Look-up how much teaching goes on at day-care facilities. Only difference is (more Gov-Gun) regulatory barriers (i.e. Gov monopolies). There isn't much 'free-market' to private schools either and if you think a teachers salary of $500K/year is poverty pay for 1080 hrs of teaching ( $463/hr ) UR insane.
You're the one that talked about $1M/yr salary for one teacher, when you compared per student funding to having a classroom of 30 kids + 1 teacher. I was just extending that line of reasoning to private school using tuition instead of government spending. That it would still be $500k/year at less than the average private school tuition in NY is meant to show you that it is a poor way of thinking about school spending. I absolutely did not say anything about it being "poverty pay" since I was saying about how that isn't a reasonable proxy for salary.
Why do threads about education end up with so little thinking in them around here?
"That way of looking at school funding is never reflective of what it actually costs to run schools."
And by 'actually costs' you used NY private school tuition as your 'proxy' that I pointed out wasn't really "free-market" and demonstrated that by contrasting it with day-care (Not regulated by BOE policy).
"poor way of thinking" is pretending Private schools are anything close to representing "free-market" alternatives.
What is then?
"For an in-house teacher (like day-care)" - 3 comments up.
^ This is the scumbag who supports murder as a preventative measure against, well he’s not smart enough to figure that out:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?…”
Umm, the schools are pretty bad, even in Iowa. What good are all the admnistrators and Masters degree teachers?
Note: my wife works for the local school district as a paraeducater. She has an associates in accounting/business from a for profit "business" school 30 years ago. She took an online course to allow her to substitute teach recently. She makes less as a substitute than as a paraeducater one on one with a special needs child.
Maybe, just maybe, the 'Public' in Public Education *is* the issue crippling it. It's not as-if everything else going 'Public' doesn't have *exactly* the same problems Housing, Education, Healthcare, etc, etc. What's that called when people think doing more of the exact same failure causes a different result?
Oh yeah; It's called STUPID.
Bathrooms.
We should get rid of anti-truancy laws!
"K-12 Schools Crippled by Covid Cash."
1. More like, "Taxpayers Crippled by Covid Cash."
2. There are worse kleptocracies than US public education, but not many.
3. If public education is an investment, the taxpayers just got cheated out of billions of dollars.
Bernie Madoff couldn't have devised a better ponzi scheme.
What does any of this have to do with AI?
Why do the little "conservatives" always pretend all government spending vanishes never to be seen again. Of the examples cited, "electrifying bus fleets, football stadium upgrades, and social-emotional learning", the first two resulted in payments to businesses who paid employees who pay mortgages and other bills. Money circulates, it doesn't evaporate. Other than, perhaps, money spent for "social-emotional learning".
You understand kaynes was compleatly disproven in the 70s right?
You understand... No, wait. You DON'T understand that barring transaction costs if any by the middleman, A paying C through B is the financial equivalent of A paying C directly.
NO, it’s not equivalent. When I pay and choose who I pay, I get what I’m paying for or take my money elsewhere. When someone else pays for me, at best I get what _they_ want, and at worst I get nothing. E.g., a school I directly paid for had better teach my kids to read, write, and do math. A school paid through the government indoctrinates the kids into believing the government, while the kids often are left illiterate and innumerate.
Money is just a representation of human labor/resources.
'Gov-Gun' THEFT doesn't add-value to your circulation and therefore consumption of the resources those $'s bought isn't replaced. Or in basic terms; you can't have a cake and eat it too. 'Guns' don't make sh*t.
Why do some people think that money continuing to circulate has some sort of meaning? Spending money per se isn’t what matters. What matters is what valuable resources are used and what value is produced by the spending. Example: money is spent by schools to pay workers to dig ditches and then fill them in. Or the workers are paid to upgrade and maintain facilities. Which is better?
Why do some people think that money continuing to circulate doesn't have meaning? A school paying workers to upgrade and maintain facilities allows those workers to buy groceries to feed their family and pay rent to keep the rain off. Other than hoarding, dollars spent move through multiple wallets on their way through the economy. Your argument is fallacious because you are describing two different thinks and trying to link them.
On average, public schools received $18,911 per student
I always think it's odd how we measure it by that metric. A far more effective data tool would be how much public schools spent on each individual student. With a breakdown of how/why.
Good point. A teacher earning say $60K per year who teaches 30 students costs $2K per student per school year. We need to be told what the other $16,911 is spent on.
So they want more. It's not enough yet. One day though, it'll finally be enough and they'll say "Thanks! We're good!"
"One day though, it’ll finally be enough" ... lol.
One of the blessings of actually having to EARN.
"It's enough" finally gets realized once the earner is all worn-out.
"For public schools that used the one-time funding to add staff, increase salaries, or plug budget holes—things experts repeatedly warned against—the fiscal reckoning has arrived as federal relief aid will expire later this year. "
Them that cain't lernz, teach!