Children and adults sit at tables in a classroom, engaging in various activities and discussions. Shelves with supplies and large windows are visible in the background.
Kindergarten students at Flynn Elementary School on Aug. 31, 2022. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Vermont schools are slated to receive $17 million in federal Covid-19 funds that were canceled by the Trump administration in March. 

The U.S. Department of Education reversed its decision to cancel the funding after a lawsuit led by 16 states and the District of Columbia, according to a Friday press release from U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. The decision also reinstates about $2.5 billion in K-12 funding for schools across the nation derived from the American Rescue Plan Act.

“This means that 19 school districts in our state will now receive funding that had been denied so that they can go forward with a wide variety of projects: summer programs, afterschool programs, school renovation,” Sanders said in a video message.

Sanders, who serves as the top Democrat on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, said he spoke several times with Secretary of Education Linda McMahon, urging her to reverse the cuts. He also worked with 19 school districts in the state to present 88 appeals to the fund cancellations.

“The (Vermont Agency of Education) is encouraged by this development and is working diligently to confirm allowable project costs and next steps associated with the announced changes in process. We are committed to continuing to partner closely with every impacted district and will be providing more details and next steps to the field through our weekly office hours,” Toren Ballard, director of policy and communications at the Vermont Agency of Education, told VTDigger following the announcement.

The money, originally allocated through a Covid-19 grant — the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds, or ESSER — had to be spent by Sept. 30, 2024, but the Biden administration approved an extension, so schools could continue using the remaining funds during the 2025-26 school year.

“We used the funds for specific purposes including employing targeted staff for instructional interventions and we also used a considerable portion to fund our summer academy program for students as we were placing an emphasis on learning loss as a result of COVID,” Harwood Unified Union School District Superintendent Mike Leichliter wrote in a statement to VTDigger.

Leichliter said the previously allocated funds have already been used, but the school district is waiting to receive the final $502,000 ESSER grant payment. 

“During a time of tremendous financial stress on our education system in Vermont, if the originally promised federal funds were not released, it would have led to increased pressure on our schools,” he wrote.