Two years after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, states have spent $36 billion out of the $184 billion in Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funds provided by Congress, or about 20 percent. As of February 28, 2022, $148 billion remains unspent.
Here is the searchable breakdown by state:
As I’ve explained before, Congress provided the Department of Education (ED) with ESSER funding through three spending bills passed since March 2020. While it’s possible that these figures overestimate what remains available—since states do not report funds that have been “obligated” but not yet spent—ED's latest data suggests that states and school districts have been slow to spend emergency K-12 funds.
Two years after Congress passed the CARES Act, most states have spent nearly all of the emergency K-12 aid provided in that spring of 2020 law. However, the following states have spent less than 80 percent of CARES Act funds: Hawaii (69 percent), Indiana (73 percent), Maine (65 percent), Maryland (76 percent), Mississippi (79 percent), Nevada (59 percent), New Hampshire (79.6 percent), New York (79 percent), and Vermont (65 percent).
Overall, Nevada (6.2 percent) and Vermont (6.5 percent) have spent the lowest portion of their total K-12 ESSER funds.
Growing evidence shows that prolonged school closures during the pandemic caused significant harm to American children. American parents deserve to know why state education agencies and public school districts have been slow to spend emergency K-12 education relief funds.