
BALTIMORE, Md. โ Today, Maryland State Department of Education Superintendent Karen B. Salmon, Ph.D. announced $781 million in additional funding to assist Maryland schools and students recover from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. This funding, allocated through the federal Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act, provides grant awards directly to local school systems and the SEED School to assist in reopening classrooms, assess and address learning loss, provide targeted tutoring and other initiatives to help alleviate the impacts of the pandemic.
โAs our education system demonstrates resilience in the face of the public health emergency wrought by COVID-19, we must continue to prioritize the needs of the Stateโs children and ensure that all children have access to a meaningful education founded in excellence and equity,โ said State Superintendent Karen B. Salmon, Ph.D. โThese additional resources will help bridge the gaps widened by the pandemic and supplement the supports already in place to safely return students to in-person instruction, focusing on those most impacted during the crisis.โ
The new funding, more than four times the initial awards to State education agencies under the Coronavirus Aid, Recovery, and Economic Security (CARES) Act earlier this spring, is intended to help States and school districts reopen schools, measure and effectively address significant learning loss, and take other actions to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on the students and families who depend upon public K-12 education.ย The funding allows flexibility so that local school leaders can address the needs of their individual schools, and encourages investment in students with unique needs including children from low-income households, students and children with disabilities, English learners, racial and ethnic minorities, students experiencing homelessness, and foster care youth.
In addition to the $780 million in funding provided by CRRSA, the State of Maryland and MSDE had already distributed $400 million in emergency funding to assist with technology, supplies, materials and equipment.
The CRRSA Act requires the Department to allocate the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Act (ESSER II) Funds based on the proportion that each State received under Title I, Part A of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA) in the most recent fiscal year. Local systems will submit applications for the funds. Funding amounts for each State of Maryland local system is outlined below:
Local School Systemย ย ESSER II
- Allegany County Public Schoolsย ย $11,278,218
- Anne Arundel County Public Schoolsย ย $48,393,505
- Baltimore City Public Schoolsย ย $197,474,401
- Baltimore County Public Schoolsย ย ย $96,638,621
- Calvert County Public Schoolsย ย $5,098,466
- Caroline County Public Schoolsย ย ย $6,096,016
- Carroll County Public Schoolsย ย $7,491,743
- Cecil County Public Schoolsย ย $12,391,716
- Charles County Public Schoolsย ย $13,743,730
- Dorchester County Public Schoolsย ย $7,775,682
- Frederick County Public Schoolsย ย $16,879,062
- Garrett County Public Schoolsย ย ย $3,986,847
- Harford County Public Schoolsย ย $18,905,691
- Howard County Public Schoolsย ย $19,371,973
- Kent County Public Schoolsย ย $2,330,154
- Montgomery County Public Schoolsย ย $112,233,764
- Prince Georgeโs County Public Schoolsย ย ย $122,234,704
- Queen Anneโs County Public Schoolsย ย $3,026,041
- St. Maryโs County Public Schoolsย ย $11,611,000
- Somerset County Public Schoolsย ย $6,009,403
- Talbot County Public Schoolsย ย $ 3,665,774
- Washington County Public Schoolsย ย $24,618,365
- Wicomico County Public Schoolsย ย ย $21,093,070
- Worcester County Public Schoolsย ย $6,406,920
- SEEDย ย $3,139,253
Totalย ย $781,894,119
