(WASHINGTON, D.C.) – Senator Patty Murray (D-Wash.) today offered an amendment to the fiscal year 2005 budget to fully fund the No Child Left Behind Act. Murray’s amendment would add $8.6 billion to the budget to fulfill the federal commitment to schools in Washington state and across the country. The amendment failed on a party-line vote. Murray will reintroduce this amendment when the budget comes to the Senate floor.
“Republicans continue to choose misguided tax cuts over fulfilling our promise to America’s children,” Murray said. “We came together in a bipartisan way to pass ‘No Child Left Behind.’ Now is the time to come together again and provide the funding we promised to children in Washington state and across the country.”
Congress signed the No Child Left Behind Act in December 2001 and the President signed it based on two commitments: schools would be held accountable for their progress and the federal government would provide schools with the resources to meet those new requirements. Over two years later, the federal government still has not sufficiently funded the Act and schools around the country are struggling to meet accountability standards.
“The greatest test of ‘No Child Left Behind’ is whether we can make the law work for children without punishing them. So far it seems that Congress is failing that test,” Murray said. “Without full funding, ‘No Child Left Behind’ will fail and our children will pay the price.”
Among the many programs funded under Murray’s amendment are:
- Title I
- Teacher Quality/Class Size
- English Language Acquisition
- After School Centers
- Rural Education
Murray’s amendment also included sufficient funding to restore the President’s cuts to such programs as:
- Smaller Learning Communities
- School Leadership
- Dropout Prevention Programs