WA Congress members demand feds release $137M in school funds: ‘Unacceptable’

Graphic of the county

The News Tribune: WA Congress members demand feds release $137M in school funds: ‘Unacceptable’

By: Simone Carter

Washington Democratic Congress members are demanding answers after the Trump administration froze billions of dollars of education funding nationwide, including nearly $137 million meant for the Evergreen State’s public schools.

U.S. Rep. Marilyn Strickland led her colleagues in writing a letter advocating for the release of those federal funds to Washington by Aug. 1. The money is used to maintain after-school and English-language-learning programs, teacher professional development and family and student support.

“Without these funds, teachers will lose access to the resources they need to encourage and empower student success in their classrooms,” the lawmakers wrote.

Joining Strickland in signing the letter were six other Democratic Congress members from Washington: U.S. Reps. Adam Smith, Kim Schrier, Pramila Jayapal, Suzan DelBene, Rick Larsen and Emily Randall. Noticeably absent: Democratic U.S. Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez.

Withholding the funds, which Congress had appropriated, will put school administrators in a serious bind, the representatives wrote. It will hamper public schools’ ability to finalize budgets and make choices about programs and staffing for the 2025-26 school year.

The lawmakers say the move also will hurt working families who rely on after-school programming and further disadvantage non-English speaking students.

Strickland, whose district encompasses parts of Pierce and Thurston counties, also railed against the federal-funding move in a Thursday post on X. She wrote that Education Secretary Linda McMahon and President Donald Trump “are stealing $137M from WA schools.”

“That is unacceptable and absurd,” Strickland said. McClatchy has emailed the Department of Education and the White House seeking comment.