Congress passes education budget
Congress | Federal School Safety
Date Posted: 9/27/2018
Congress passed a funding bill today that averts a looming government shutdown and, among other spending, includes FY 2019 funding for the U.S. Department of Education (ED). The measure now heads to President Trump for his signature.
Under the spending measure, the overall federal education budget is increased based on current levels, with major programs like Title I and special education seeing program specific bumps. President Trump asked for more than $7 billion in overall budget cuts to ED in his budget request to Congress earlier this year. Congress's education budget also largely ignores his request to funnel north of $1 billion to various school choice programs, but does include increased funding for charter school grants.
The bill increases funding levels for a grant aimed at creating safer schools. Despite efforts from Democrats, a prohibition on using certain funding under the Every Students Succeeds Act (ESSA) to arm teachers in schools did not make it into the bill. Texas has been at the center of the debate following questions from Texas school districts asking whether Title IV ESSA funding could be used to arm teachers. At a hearing on ESSA held by the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee yesterday, the issue again garnered significant attention. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has maintained that the law offers districts considerable flexibility and does not specifically prohibit spending on arming teachers.
President Trump said earlier today that he will sign the measure, which keeps the government running through December 7 and also funds the Defense, Labor, and Health and Human Services Departments.
CONVERSATION
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
07/02/2026
Teach the Vote's Week in Review: July 2, 2026
Happy America 250! Catch up on SBOE news and the “What Makes a Great School?” Texas Tribune Symposium before the holiday weekend.
07/02/2026
ATPE voices shape discussion at Texas Tribune’s “What Makes a Great School?” Symposium
The daylong conversation at the Holdsworth Center brought together campus-level educators, superintendents, elected officials, and other stakeholders.
06/29/2026
SBOE approves controversial Social Studies TEKS, literary works list at June meeting
The new K–8 Social Studies TEKS and statewide literary works list are slated to go into effect during the 2030-31 school year.