The U.S. Department of Education (USDE) has allocated $40,817,799 to Kentucky for emergency assistance to non-public schools in the state. All non-public schools may apply to the state for reimbursement
Dear Secretary Dortch:
We the undersigned organizations submit these comments pursuant to the Federal Communications Commission’s rules (47 C.F.R. §§ 1.415 & 1.419) in response to the abovereferenced proceeding that the FCC announced in its Public Notice DA 21-98 (“Notice”) of February 1, 2021.
In its Notice, the FCC focuses on specific areas of inquiry, including on page 6 where it asks for comments addressing “Funding and Prioritization,” stating that “substantially more funding might be needed than is potentially available to support remote learning through the E-Rate program.”
2 Our comments seek to illustrate how:
Additional funding for the E-Rate program is currently unnecessary because of the availability of more than $60 billion in public funding still unspent from other congressionally created programs. The FCC should assist in these disbursements before considering E-Rate expansion.
Currently on ventilator: 119
Top counties with the most positive cases today are: Jefferson, Fayette, Oldham, Campbell and Kenton. Each county reported at least 20 new cases. Jefferson County reported 95.
To see a list of those reported lost to the virus today, click here.
Governor and First Lady Launch
Team Kentucky Gallery
On Monday, First Lady Britainy Beshear invited Kentuckians to lend their artistic talents to a new
Team Kentucky Gallery, which will be located in a main hall of the state Capitol in Frankfort. The gallery will feature art in six-month installments.
The deadline to submit artwork for the first installment is May 15. For more information, see the full release.
Private schools in OKC, state benefit from federal relief funds By: Jennifer Palmer Oklahoma Watch February 16, 2021
A sign in an entryway at The Academy of Classical Christian Studies. The northeast Oklahoma City private school received $177,767 from Gov. Kevin Stitt’s federally funded Emergency Education Relief Fund and $598,179 in federal Paycheck Protection Program loans. (File photo by Whitney Bryen/Oklahoma Watch)
Oklahoma private schools have qualified for federal relief funds in several ways.
Those include a tuition grant program created by Gov. Kevin Stitt, the Paycheck Protection Program, and a newly created federal program for non-public schools.
Stay in School Fund
Gov Hogan submits $1 5 billion supplemental budget focused on education wmdt.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wmdt.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.