From Capital to Campus
The second session of the 106th Congress, which begins in January, is
expected to be shortabout 110 days, due to the presidential and
Congressional primaries and electionspartisan, and important for
education issues.
Top-of-the-agenda items include the reauthorization of the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act of 1965, the budget for Fiscal Year 2001 education
spending, tax cut legislation, pension reform, and bankruptcy reform.
President Clinton's State of the Union is tentatively scheduled for January
27. The Administration will submit the President's Fiscal Year 2001 budget to
the 106th Congress on February 7.
In the year 2000, NEA will continue to work with the 106th Congress, the
administration, and the U.S. Department of Education for a strong investment in
higher education and implementation of the Higher Education Amendments of 1998.
Despite early threats to federal education funding, NEA scored a
number of victories in advancing public education in the first session of the
106th Congress that ended in December.
Education funding will increase by $2.5 billion, or 6.2 percent for fiscal
2000,the fourth consecutive yearly increase for education.
Among key higher education programs receiving increases are Pell
grantsthe maximum award will reach $3,300 for FY2000and GEAR-UP,
the higher ed middle school partnership program, which will get an additional
$80 million, bringing total funding to $200 million. Also increased: college
work-study.
The Higher Education Act of 1998 is now posted on the Education Department's
Website: www.ed.gov.
To subscribe to the NEA E-mail Legislative Alert, send to
lyris@list.nea.org this message:
Subscribe hecongress. Or read the Alert on this
web site. Share
your legislative news with us.
|