The Longer the Shutdown, the Worse for Schools, Education Experts Say
The Education Department plans to furlough 87% of employees, pausing new grants and civil rights investigations while maintaining federal aid and loan payments.
- The government shutdown will significantly affect the Education Department's operations, halting work and investigations.
- About 87% of the Education Department's workforce will be furloughed due to the shutdown, according to a department contingency plan.
- Investigations into schools over alleged civil rights violations will be halted during the shutdown.
- New grantmaking activity will cease, and the department's advisory and regulatory roles will pause.
152 Articles
152 Articles
How will the government shutdown actually impact you
Here’s the Scoop: Everyone’s talking about the U.S. government shutdown. But when it comes to your day-to-day life, what does it actually mean? On today’s episode of “Here’s the Scoop,” Yasmin Vossoughian hears from NBC News’ Christine Romans, Gary Gruba, Monica Alba, and Erica Edwards on what this shutdown means for your wallet, health care, and more. Listen to the full episode wherever you get your podcasts.
FAFSA now open for Tennessee students despite government shutdown
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WATE) — Despite the federal government shutdown, the Free Application for Federal Student Aid is now open for all Tennessee students. The Tennessee Higher Education Commission announced Wednesday that students and their families can now begin applying at www.fafsa.gov. The U.S. Department of Education made the form available on Sept. 24, marking the earliest launch in the program's history. According to the Associated Press, FA…
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