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For Immediate Release
May 7, 2007
Contact: Anna Gustafson
717-787-2637
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Rhoades Resolution Calls For
Greater Federal Funding For Special Education
HARRISBURG – The Senate approved a resolution today urging
Congress to increase funding for special education to meet Federal mandates,
according to Senator James J. Rhoades (R-29).
Rhoades said that
Pennsylvania receives only 37 percent out of 100 percent of the federally
mandated special education grants that the Congress is supposed to provide to
the Commonwealth's schools. While the population of children with special needs
has grown by less than 1 percent in Pennsylvania since 2000, the state has
increased spending by more than 25 percent to comply with the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act.
Senate Resolution
91, sponsored by Rhoades, urges the President and Congress to provide full
federal funding for the special education programs that are mandated by federal
law, in order to fulfill the promise of special education funding that the
Congress committed to when they enacted the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act ( IDEA).
"The Federal
government must provide state and local governments with the funding they need
to implement these mandates," Rhoades said. "Our special education students need
and deserve support from both the state and Federal governments, and we are
providing more than our fair share at the state and local levels."
Rhoades said that
the Federal government currently provides just 37 percent of the total cost for
special education in Pennsylvania, despite local school districts being held
responsible for 100 percent of the cost for compliance with the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act ( IDEA).
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