Weekly Update 2/7/22

President and Administration

Natalie Jaresko, the executive director of Puerto Rico’s Financial Oversight and Management Board, is resigning after helping the U.S. commonwealth through a historic bankruptcy…

President Biden issued a proclamation declaring January 2022 as National Mentoring Month. Mentoring has a positive effect, both academically and professionally…

President Biden pledged a stepped-up federal fight against gun violence as he visited New York City on Thursday, 2/3, and called for more funding for law enforcement and community anti-violence programs to address rising crime… 

Employers in the U.S. added roughly 467,000 jobs in January and the numbers for November and December were revised significantly upward - an unexpected jolt to the economy that came in the midst of the surging Omicron variant of COVID-19…

On Friday, 2/4, the Biden administration issued a new rule asking schools to soon start meeting nutrition standards that were strengthened at the urging of former first lady Michelle Obama - but were suspended during the pandemic as schools struggled to procure more nutritious options… 

Congress  

The “Four Corners” – the chairs and ranking Republicans on the House and Senate appropriations committees – continue meeting in an effort to extend government funding… 

The White House is preparing another COVID-19 funding request for Congress that could include both domestic and international priorities…

On 1/27, Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-NM) had brain surgery in response to a relatively minor stroke…

The House approved a $350 billion initiative Friday, 2/4, to boost U.S. competitiveness with China and other rivals, but differences with the Senate and emerging partisan divides signaled struggles ahead in reaching a compromise… 

The Republican Party on Friday, 2/4, officially declared the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol and events that led to it “legitimate political discourse,” and rebuked Reps. Liz Cheney (R-WY) and Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), who have been the most outspoken in condemning the deadly riot and the role of former President Trump in spreading the election lies that fueled it…

Education

There is a new risk-based model for how state regulators should oversee colleges that enroll GI Bill recipients…

On Friday, 2/4, the House approved an amendment to add the College Transparency Act to the America Competes Act, which the House then passed…

Today, 2/7, the Education Department released updates to the College Scorecard that make the tool more useful for students and families weighing college options…

Last week, ED and its technical assistance partner the National Comprehensive Center released a new resource to help states share their progress deploying the $122 billion American Rescue Plan Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ARP ESSER) funds…

During the two years that COVID-19 has upended school for millions of families, education leaders have increasingly touted personalized tutors as a means of compensating for lost learning…

The national six-year completion rate for students who started college in 2015 reached 62.2 percent, according to a new report out on Thursday, 2/3, from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center…

As battles erupt around the country over how the subject of race should be treated in the classroom, a new survey finds Americans are split over whether schools should teach children about current-day racism…

Weekly Update 1/31/22

California

Assembly Bill 1690, introduced last week, would ban single-use cigarette filters, e-cigarettes and vape products in the state with the aim of benefiting the environment and public health…

Gov. Newsom and state lawmakers reached an agreement last week to again require employers to provide workers with paid sick leave to recover from COVID-19 or care for a family member with the virus…

Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) is proposing to require that all schoolchildren receive a COVID-19 vaccine starting in 2023, a law that would be the nation's strictest student mandate if approved…

San Jose is now the first city in the nation to mandate gun owners to have liability insurance and pay an annual fee in an effort to curb gun violence…

California State University trustees strongly indicated Wednesday, 1/26, they will permanently scrap SAT and ACT testing requirements for admission - a move that would align it with the University of California, which dumped the standardized exams it criticized as biased and of little value…

Coronavirus

A new resource from Rockefeller and Duke university highlights case examples from Illinois, Massachusetts, and North Carolina’s Test to Stay programs and identifies four keys to success to help state and local officials overcome the challenges of Test to Stay programs…

The Omicron variant may be more dangerous for children than earlier COVID-19 strains, a study of hospitalization data from one of South Africa’s biggest medical insurance programs showed…

Child care centers in which children wear masks are less likely than others to shut down from COVID-19 outbreaks, according to a large-scale, year-long study of child masking in the U.S. Conducted by researchers at Yale University…

President and Administration

On Tuesday, 1/25, the House Democratic leadership released the America COMPETES Act, aimed at boosting U.S. high tech research and manufacturing, with a heavy focus on the semiconductor industry…

SAMHSA has released: Ready to Respond: Mental Health Beyond Crisis and COVID-19, which addresses…

On Thursday, 1/27, President Biden and the Supreme Court’s oldest member - Justice Stephen Breyer - held a press conference announcing Breyer’s retirement…

Companies doing business with the U.S. government have faced greater legal and regulatory changes than the average employer outside of health care under Biden, with more developments potentially ahead…

The White House has named a point person in the Biden administration’s efforts to reverse the alarming rise of homelessness across the U.S…

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has committed another $240 million in Emergency Connectivity Funding…

President Biden is planning to visit New York City on Thursday, 2/3, to discuss how to combat gun violence with NYC Mayor Eric Adams… 

The State of the Union is set for March 1…

The nation’s top financial regulators will soon embark on a controversial, first-of-its-kind mission: forcing banks and other industry players to prepare for potential threats to the U.S. financial system from climate change…

Congress  

Government funding runs out 2/18 and appropriators are hoping for a year-long funding deal as part of an omnibus spending package… 

Dozens of Democrats on Wednesday, 1/26, called on President Biden to release a legal memo his administration prepared about his powers to cancel student debt…

American families are feeling the financial squeeze of inflation and a persistent pandemic as Democrats return to Washington this week no closer to a deal on a reconciliation bill party leaders hoped would by now provide relief…

Speaker Pelosi announced last week that she plans to run for reelection, but did not announce that she will run for speaker in her video announcement…

Education

At least six historically black colleges and universities received bomb threats this morning, 1/31, disrupting campus operations and launching police investigations…

A new report from the education consulting firm EAB, released on Friday, 1/28, examines some of the ripple effects of the pandemic that could hurt student retention, including social disengagement and worsening mental health among college students, as well as lower transfer rates… 

When Congress voted last spring to send schools an unprecedented $125 billion in COVID-19 relief funds, it laid down some basic guidelines…

Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona on Thursday, 1/27, laid out his vision for continued recovery through the pandemic and key actions in four priority areas that will guide the Department's work over the coming months and years…

The Ed Recovery Hub, launched last week, showcases innovative, high-potential actions that states, districts and schools are taking right now that deserve additional consideration and emulation…

Going to college financially benefits low-income students, but less so than peers who are not low income, according to a new report…

The College Board announced last week that the SAT will be delivered digitally internationally beginning in 2023 and in the U.S. in 2024…

Immigration Update 1/25/22

California

California would allow all income-eligible residents to qualify for the state’s healthcare program for low-income people regardless of immigration status under Gov. Newsom’s recent budget proposal…

New demographic data shows California’s population falling for the first time on record - underscoring shifting immigration patterns, declining birth rates and the large number of deaths at the hands of the pandemic…

The Judicial System

Earlier this month, Biden administration lawyers urged the Supreme Court to deny bond hearings and a chance to go free to immigrants who are being held for deportation after returning illegally to the U.S…

Last week, the Biden administration vigorously defended a Trump-era emergency order that U.S. border authorities have used to expel hundreds of thousands of migrants without screening them for asylum, arguing the unprecedented policy is still needed to control the spread of COVID-19…

President and Administration

A newly disclosed memorandum citing “unprecedented” meddling by the Trump administration in the 2020 census and circulated among top Census Bureau officials indicates how strongly career Census Bureau employees sought to resist efforts by the administration to manipulate the count for Republican political gain…

In mid-December, the Biden administration withdrew from negotiations to offer financial compensation to thousands of migrant families for the harm inflicted on them by a Trump-era policy that separated parents and children at the border…

Apprehensions at the southwest border rose in November for the first time since July…

In early January the Biden administration again submitted Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez for consideration to lead the key immigration enforcement role within the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS)…

President Biden promised during his campaign to “end for-profit” detention, but he did not include ICE in his January 2021 executive order eliminating the use of private prisons… 

Federal agents from Homeland Security Investigations say they have been kicked out of joint drug operations, shunned by local police departments and heckled at campus career fairs…

In early December, the Biden administration reached a deal with the Mexican government to restart the Trump-era “Remain in Mexico” program that requires asylum seekers to wait outside U.S. territory while their claims are processed…

Congress

Zoe Lofgren, a San Jose Democrat, chairs the immigration subcommittee of the House judiciary panel and is a longtime leader on immigration policy in Washington… 

The Senate in December approved President Biden’s choice to run Customs and Border Protection in a 50-47 vote, filling a key post that has oversight of one of the president’s earliest and biggest challenges: handling the historic spike in illegal crossings at the nation’s southern border…

Afghan Refugees

The Continuing Resolution signed into law by President Biden in December includes $7 billion for the resettlement of Afghan evacuees, an amount some Republicans sharply criticize… 

Haitian Migrants

The DHS’s civil rights office raised an internal warning to immigration and border officials that deporting Haitians to their volatile home country risked violating U.S. civil and human rights obligations and advised them against the practice in late August…

Weekly Update 1/24/22

California

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday, 1/21, told reporters that his administration is planning for the endemic phase of COVID-19, although he declined to offer a picture of what that would look like…

A group of 45 colleges and universities in California was selected to participate in a new statewide initiative to involve low-income students in finding solutions for pressing state problems such as inequities in education, climate change, pandemic recovery and food insecurity​, according to an announcement from Newsom’s office…

Senate Bill 866 by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) would allow a child 12 or older to consent to any vaccine approved by the FDA and recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the CDC without their parents’ knowledge…

After weeks of an unprecedented spike in COVID-19 cases that challenged hospitals, schools and other institutions, there are growing indications that the surge spawned by the Omicron variant is flattening and, in some parts of California, even beginning to wane…

California would funnel $50 million into educating young people about the risks of opioids and fentanyl under Newsom’s latest budget proposal…

In a visit to a San Bernardino fire station on Friday, 1/21, Vice President Kamala Harris announced that the federal government will provide California $600 million to help the state recover from a historically severe wildfire season while highlighting plans to spend $5 billion more to address the dangers posed by fires… 

Coronavirus

The Biden administration will make 400 million N95 masks available to Americans for free starting this week…

On Friday, 1/21, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) updated its mask guidance, now saying that people "may choose" to wear N95 and KN95 masks because they offer the best protection against COVID-19… 

In a systematic review of 36 studies from 11 countries, school closures and social lockdown during the first COVID-19 wave were associated with adverse mental health symptoms (such as distress and anxiety) and health behaviors (such as higher screen time and lower physical activity) among children and adolescents…

There is no evidence at present that healthy children and adolescents need booster doses of COVID-19 vaccine, the World Health Organization's (WHO) chief scientist said last week…

A U.S. judge in Texas issued a nationwide injunction on Friday, 1/21, barring the federal government from enforcing President Biden's requirement that federal workers without qualifying medical or religious exemptions be vaccinated for COVID-19…

President and Administration

President Biden on Friday, 1/21, urged Congress to pass legislation strengthening research and development and manufacturing for supply chains to address global semiconductor shortages… 

Last week, Puerto Rico received approval from a federal judge to leave bankruptcy under the largest public-sector debt restructuring deal in U.S. history, nearly five years after the financially strapped territory declared it could not repay its creditors…

President Biden's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law includes a historic investment of $65 billion to help close the digital divide and ensure that all Americans have access to reliable, affordable, high-speed broadband…

Earlier this month, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack announced an adjustment in school meal reimbursements to help schools continue to serve children healthy and nutritious meals… 

At its peak, 18.5 million kids relied on Pandemic-EBT in states and territories, which began under the Trump administration and continued under President Biden…

The Supreme Court agreed today, 1/24, to hear challenges to the admissions process at Harvard and University of North Carolina…

Federal agencies were directed to implement President Biden’s $15 an hour minimum wage for government workers on Friday, 1/21…

Congress  

House Democrats are expected to unveil their new version of USICA (U.S. Innovation and Competition Act) this week…

The Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME)-led bipartisan group of senators exploring reforms to the 1887 Electoral Count Act is holding a Zoom meeting today, 1/24, as they continue to inch toward an agreement…

Democrats on Thursday, 1/20, scrambled anew to scale back what once was a roughly $2 trillion package to overhaul the nation’s health care, education, climate, immigration and tax laws, pledging to deliver one of President Biden’s top priorities - even if they weren’t exactly sure how…

Education

On Friday, 1/21, the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and the Department of Education released a toolkit outlining federal resources available to help Puerto Rico recover and rebuild safe, healthy, and modernized school facilities…

On Thursday, 1/20, the Department of Education announced more resources for students and institutions to help reduce barriers to success in higher education, particularly those created and exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic…

The Biden administration announced a series of administrative actions aimed at attracting and retaining international students and researchers in STEM fields on Friday, 1/21…

One in five undergraduates uses peer counseling for mental health support, according to a new survey of more than 2,000 U.S. college students…

Black and Latino students nationwide are disproportionately learning from inexperienced and uncertified teachers, according to new research…

Nearly 52 percent of parents considered or are considering new schools for their children, according to a National School Choice Week survey conducted this month… 

Yet another study is challenging the idea that student evaluations of teaching reliably measure what they’re intended to measure: instructional quality…

Pima Community College in Arizona has a host of new short-term certificate programs to help students become desirable job candidates in less than a year’s time…

Weekly Update 1/18/22

California

Gov. Newsom released his new budget blueprint, some highlights include…

State Senator Dave Cortese is considering legislation that would create a pilot program at select California State University campuses issuing $500 monthly stipends for one year to students whose family income is in the bottom 20 percent of earners in the state…

Gov. Newsom said the executive order would help alleviate the shortage by giving retirees and substitute teachers "more hours of opportunity" and speeding up the hiring process, which he described as "laborious”…

Newsom’s statement is his first public concession that some K-12 schools will likely be forced to temporarily shutter in the coming weeks as COVID-19 cases rapidly increase due to the Omicron variant…

Bay Area counties once again are postponing an important census count of homeless residents as they grapple with staffing and volunteer shortages...

Following an hours-long debate and public discussion on Tuesday night, 1/11, the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors voted to ban flavored tobacco sales - candy-flavored e-cigarettes, hookah tobacco, menthol cigarettes, and sweet cigars often used to smoke cannabis will all be banned beginning in July 2022…

About $11.5 million of the direct restitution and $261 million of the private debt cancellation will be for Californians, according to the California attorney general’s office…

Last week, Newsom’s administration announced a plan for addressing extreme heat that includes recommendations on how to monitor deaths caused by heat waves and the possible establishment of temperature limits for residential units…

Coronavirus

On Wednesday, 1/12, the Biden administration announced that they were increasing COVID-19 testing for schools by…

The Biden administration on Wednesday, 1/19, will begin accepting orders for free at-home COVID-19 tests, the latest government response to a record number of infections…

Distrust, misinformation and delays because of the holidays and bad weather have combined to produce what authorities say are alarmingly low COVID-19 vaccination rates in U.S. children ages five to 11… 

A study of 53,000 cases from Southern California found that there were about 50 percent fewer hospital admissions, about 75 percent fewer intensive care admissions and a 70 percent reduction in hospital length of stay with Omicron cases as compared with Delta…

Scientists are seeing signals that COVID-19′s alarming omicron wave is about to peak in the U.S., at which point cases may start dropping off dramatically…

On Thursday, 1/13, President Biden announced that the federal government is deploying additional medical teams to six states - New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Rhode Island, Michigan and New Mexico - to help hospitals struggling to respond to the spike in cases of Omicron…

President and Administration

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky is facing criticism from the disability rights community for remarks she made during a recent interview on ABC’s Good Morning America…

The Supreme Court on Thursday, 1/13, blocked the Biden administration from enforcing a vaccine-or-testing mandate for large employers, dealing a blow to a key element of the White House’s plan to address the pandemic…

Prices rose at the fastest pace in four decades in December, increasing seven percent over the same period a year ago, and cementing 2021 as a year marked by soaring inflation wrought by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic…

Water projects meant to quench drought-stricken Western cities’ thirst are set to receive $1 billion over the next five years with infrastructure funding made available through the Interior Department, the agency announced Friday, 1/14…

Last week, Treasury Department officials said that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will face “enormous challenges” during this year’s tax filing season, warning of delays to refunds and other taxpayer services…

Congress  

A bill to auto-enroll veterans in the Veterans Affairs Department health-care programs will be taken up by the House this week…

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) told reporters early last week that he expects Biden to soon request “substantial sums” through a supplemental appropriations bill to combat COVID-19, possibly including foreign aid…

After preliminary discussions last weekend between Senate leaders and top appropriators about moving omnibus spending legislation before the 2/18 deadline, the group - Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Appropriations Committee Chair Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and Appropriations Committee ranking member Richard Shelby (R-AL) - met again on Tuesday, 1/11 and Wednesday, 1/12 - in an attempt to break the logjam…

House Democrats running for reelection in competitive districts have confronted party leaders with demands that they break up President Biden’s sprawling Build Back Better spending bill that has stalled in the Senate amid opposition from Sen. Manchin, and hold votes on a series of politically popular provisions that would appeal to centrist voters and core Democrats… 

The Senate is expected to consider a House-passed package that includes the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act today, 1/18…

The 165-member Congressional Gun Violence Prevention Task Force held its first meeting of 2022 on Thursday, 1/13, which included a briefing from 97Percent and Beacon Research on new polling of more than 1,000 gun owners, including the finding that gun owners underestimate support for gun safety policies among their peers…

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) declared Wednesday, 1/12, that he won’t voluntarily undergo an interview with the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attacks…

Education

In Florida’s public school system, school personnel can use handcuffs, zip-ties, straightjackets, or other devices on students who are acting out or misbehaving in a way that poses a threat to themselves or others…

Enrollments continued to fall nationwide despite a full in-person return to campus last semester for many colleges and universities, the latest data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center show…

According to Institute of Education Sciences (IES) Director Mark Schneider’s latest blog post, IES will shortly announce two new prize competitions: one to incentivize innovation in middle school science instruction, and another to improve mathematics achievement for elementary students with disabilities…

Almost nine in 10 college students think campuses are facing a mental health crisis, according to a new survey from TimelyMD, a student-first telehealth provider…

The administration this month plans to start rewriting key parts of its college accountability agenda, drafting new regulations that restrict how and when colleges and universities - particularly for-profit institutions - can access federal funding…

State financial aid totals continued to grow during the 2019–20 academic year, just before state budgets and family incomes were roiled by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the latest report from the National Association of State Student Grant and Aid Programs…

More than half of Americans favor remote learning to protect students and teachers’ “health and safety” as COVID-19 surges, according to a new Harris Poll conducted for Axios…

In a Dear Colleague Letter, Secretary Cardona outlined (1) evidence-based and promising short- and long-term strategies for addressing teacher and staff shortages, which can be acute in STEM fields, that may be funded through American Rescue Plan (ARP) Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund and (2) examples of how ARP and past relief funding are already being used to attract and retain teachers and staff…

Today, 1/18, the U.S. Department of Education announced that every state education agency (SEA) received approval of their American Rescue Plan Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ARP ESSER) plan before the end of December 2021…