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In Short

What the Budget Resolution Really Means for Education Funding

The House and Senate are expected to vote tomorrow on the congressional budget resolution for fiscal year 2009, and debate over the resolution is becoming increasingly contentious. Do education advocates and the media really know what is at stake for education?

Both the House and Senate budget resolutions would boost discretionary spending above from the current fiscal year 2008 levels and above . The Republican minority is not pleased, “huge” and “astonishing”

How this all affects education funding is a complicated question. is an often misunderstood document that sets a congressional spending plan for the next five years. The budget resolution recommends spending levels in 20 broad categories but does not set funding amounts for individual programs. One category, includes a total allocation for all education-related programs. Only after the budget resolution debate has ended will and select a discretionary spending level for the House and Senate Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Subcommittees, which then determine the discretionary funding for specific education programs.

Confused? just . If you want to know what is actually happening in the budget world right now—hint: It’s not what the political rhetoric coming from Congress is telling you— by Jason Delisle.

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Lindsey Luebchow
What the Budget Resolution Really Means for Education Funding