Quantcast
breaking news

Sequestration Could Majorly Impact Education In West Texas

By: Marianne Elisak
Updated: February 27, 2013
watch video
MIDLAND---Unless Congress acts by March 1st, 2013, which seems unlikely at this point, a series of automatic cuts called the sequester will take effect. 

This threatens hundreds of thousands of middle class jobs as well as vital services for children.  One of the major impacts will be placed on education.

Should the sequester take effect, the White House says that state will lose approximately $67.8 million in funding for primary and secondary education this fiscal year.

The Chief Financial Officer for the Midland Independent School District, David Garcia, says that that MISD will lose 2 of their major grants.

"It's strictly all financial impact with respect to the funding that we receive through the N.C.L.B. No child Left Behind grant and the I.D.E.A. formula funding for special ed" says Garcia. 

Garcia says that those funds are used for vital resources like technology, reading and instructional materials for at-risk students, including students with an economical disadvantage and special needs students.

Over at the Ector County Independent School District, Superintendent Hector Mendez says that they are being told that they could lose between 6-12% of the $15 million they are given in federal funds.

This is something the school district was warned about last summer, and began this school year knowing it was a possibility. 

"We've been conservative in how we have budgeted and spent this federal money" says Superintendent Mendez.

As for lay offs, both districts say that the sequester will not be affecting their staff.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

We've seen a lot of crashes on local roads, in part due to the population boom.  MPD fears that another reason for the wrecks is aggressive drivers who are breaking traffic laws....

Three people are recovering after a shooting at a local night club....

DPS Troopers say a man ran from his car after he crashed it early Monday morning....

Experts are saying that Lubbock is on its way to being directly impacted by an oil boom in the near future....

A weak cold front will cool our temperatures a bit Tuesday....

In the span of a few minutes on Monday, the Texas House gave the green light to pension increases for state elected officials and then watched the effort to ban "double dipping" by politicians a...

A union representing Texas correctional officers is arguing that a pay raise approved by state budget writers last week would be insufficient and lead to erosion of security in the state's...

Sweeping changes to the Texas craft brewing industry easily won final approval in the House on Monday afternoon. The legislation now moves to the governor's desk....

Texas Comptroller Susan Combs and major oil and gas interests are fighting hard to stop reforms of the species protection program that was used in the oil-rich Permian Basin to keep the feds a...

A 21-year-old is dead after an early morning accident in Midland....

 
 
 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Permianbasin360.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved