10/12: Some states not spending school stimulus funds correctly
NPR: Inspector General says states are not spending school stimulus funds as intended
The Department of Education's Inspector General is taking issue with how states are using school stimulus funds -- instead of boosting funding for schools and colleges and protecting key programs and jobs, some states are using the money to replace what was cut from their education budget.
According to Jon Shure of the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, 25 states have cut funding for K-12 education, and 34 have cut higher-education funding. Shure says that the stimulus has covered no more than 30 percent of states' budget shortfalls.
"States are facing such a severe crisis that a lot of the federal money is just helping states stay even and avoid further budget cuts," Shure says.
ALABAMA: Some churches begin pushing for recycling, environmental stewardship
ARKANSAS: Historic preservation boosts state's economy
FLORIDA: Senate Majority Leader denies conflict of interest with lobbyist wife on offshore drilling
GEORGIA: Recession hard on homeless shelters, services for the poor
KENTUCKY: State Sen. Joey Pendleton says time is right to legalize industrial hemp
LOUISIANA: Gov. Jindal straddling health care politics
MISSISSIPPI: Group wants stronger animal cruelty laws in state
NORTH CAROLINA: Legislators to revamp tax system
SOUTH CAROLINA: New study shows growing domestic violence problem in state
TENNESSEE: Two legislative oversight committees are back on task
VIRGINIA: Debate between gubernatorial candidates is tonight
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Labels: cruelty, debate, domestic, health, Jindal, law, offshore, oversight, recession, tax


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