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The funds have already been allocated by Congress and budgeted by school districts for the upcoming school year.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta sued the federal government alongside 23 other states over frozen funding for education ...
California’s legal action points out that Congress, not the executive branch, possesses the power of the purse, saying “the ...
States sue over billions in federal education funding that was supposed to begin flowing July 1. Trump officials are ...
The frozen funds were intended for after-school and summer programs, teacher training, programs for English learners, and ...
Nearly two dozen state AGs and blue state governors sue Trump administration for withholding more than $6 billion in federal ...
The Trump administration says the funds, which were supposed to go to schools July 1, are under review. Democratic attorneys general and governors are suing to restore the money.
The lawsuit accuses the Trump administration of violating the Constitution and exceeding its authority by ignoring Congress’ ...
The states lost out on billions in funding for after-school and summer programs, teacher training and other initiatives.
"President Trump seems comfortable risking the academic success of a generation to further his own misguided political agenda ...
The Trump administration violated the U.S. Constitution when it withheld billions from schools in early July, the lawsuit ...
The U.S. Department of Education froze the funding without warning June 30, a day before it's typically sent to Pennsylvania ...