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Local schools spent pandemic relief funds on reading programs, tutors, facilities updates, nurses and other staff. That money runs out in four months. Southwest Ohio schools got $745 million in ...
Improved performance at school: A 2021 report from the Brookings Institution analyzed the impact of a program that offered schoolwide free meals and found an improvement in math performance ...
With federal support uncertain and eventually ending, some states began using their own funds for an extension of pandemic-era free universal school lunches. In 2021, California became the first state to have a universal school meal program for the state's public school students, followed shortly by Maine, in time for the 2021-2022 school year ...
The latest pandemic-initiated benefit program is coming to an end, as federal funding provided by the Universal School Meals Program Act expired on June 30 and will not be renewed. Universal free...
The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached the U.S. state of Ohio on March 9, 2020, when the state's first cases were reported. The first death from COVID-19 in Ohio was reported on March 19. Subsequently, records supported by further testing showed that undetected cases had existed in Ohio since early January, with the first confirmed ...
I Promise School [3] (IPS) is a public elementary school in Akron, Ohio. Opened in 2018, it is supported by the LeBron James Family Foundation and specifically aimed at at-risk children . Opening with students attending grades three and four, the school became fully operational in 2022, teaching grades one through eight.
Ohio's Senate President says school choice only exists if students have access to a private or charter school that can take them. Every Ohio child will be eligible for a school voucher but many ...
The pandemic affected the city of Columbus, Ohio, as Ohio's stay-at-home order shuttered all nonessential businesses, and caused event cancellations into 2021. The shutdown led to protests at the Ohio Statehouse, the state capitol building. The COVID-19 pandemic muted activity in Columbus, especially in its downtown core, from 2020 to 2022.