Friday, August 13, 2010

Cleaver explains how Education Jobs bill will affect Missouri

In his weekly EC from DC newsletter, Congressman Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo. addresses the Education Jobs and Medicaid Assistance Act, which was signed into law this week:

This week the President signed H.R. 1586 the Education Jobs and Medicaid Assistance Act into law. The legislation will save or create 319,000 American jobs in local communities, including 161,000 teacher jobs, and also discourages American corporations from shipping jobs overseas.


The legislation includes $10 billion to save teacher jobs and $16.1 billion in health assistance to the states. The funding will also keep police officers and firefighters on the job. The bill is completely paid for.

Under the bill, Missouri will receive an estimated $189 million in emergency education funding. It is estimated that 3,300 Missouri teacher jobs would be saved by this funding.

The legislation uses the same formula to distribute the education funds to states as was used in the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund under the Recovery Act. The formula allocates funds based on each state’s relative population of individuals ages 5 to 24 and of each state’s share of the total population. Governors will distribute funds to districts using the state’s primary funding formulae for K-12 education or each district’s share of Title I. Once the bill is enacted, Governors will be required to tell local school districts which formula they plan to use to allocate the funds to ensure districts can plan immediately to hire back staff.

I was proud to support this legislation. School is starting soon, and these funds are immediately needed. In the Kansas City school district alone, nearly 600 employees overall have involuntarily lost their jobs. Failure to pass this bill would have forced states to lay off more workers, cut more services, and raise taxes more than they would otherwise to balance their budgets. These actions would further slow our economic recovery.

3 comments:

  1. Anonymous8:12 PM

    The transportation services paid by Medicaid needs to be greatly reduced or eliminated.

    Not one legislator in Southwest Missouri can tell you how much money is spent on transportation services, county by county, in Missouri. This one area probably has as much fradulent billing as any other part of the program.

    Medicaid money should be paid for doctor/patient/facility services only.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good to hear that so many jobs would be saved by this bill, lots of people will be thankful to this bill & administration for saving their jobs & livelihood.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous1:23 PM

    Too bad it's smoke and mirrors. None of the $209 million in edicaid funds will go toward police and fire. It will all be held for 2012 budget shortfall coverage.

    ReplyDelete