BREAKING NEWS ON TKC!!! CONGRESSMAN CLEAVER ANNOUNCES MORE THAN $16 MILLION FOR KCMSD!!!



News of a $16.27 million in Recovery Act award to The Kansas City, Missouri School District slated to help the transition following a right-sizing plan that involved 26 school closings comes from Congressman Cleaver's office. Here's the press release in its entirety:
Cleaver announces $16.27 million in Recovery Act award for Kansas City School District

Money to invest in student classrooms and buildings as District is reorganized

( WASHINGTON , D.C. ) – Congressman Emanuel Cleaver, the U.S. Department of Treasury and the Department of Education are pleased to announce that $16,274,000 in school construction bonds authority has been awarded to the Kansas City Missouri School District .

The Congressman announced that nationally $11 billion was allocated for qualified school construction bonds under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). Qualified school construction bonds can be used to finance the construction, rehabilitation or repair of a public school facility or for the acquisition of land where a school will be built.

“This is money to help our local school districts continue to repair and invest in our schools despite the economic hard times we are facing. At a time when the Kansas City School District is consolidating half its schools, this allocation will allow for much needed building and classroom improvements necessary to accommodate shifting thousands of students. This is a zero-interest loan authority to invest in Kansas City ’s students as they adjust to their new situation,” said Congressman Cleaver.

This announcement comes at a time when the Kansas City , Missouri School District is embarking on a radical transformation plan for Teaching and Learning for a New Millennium. “This funding is just what we need to upgrade many of our facilities and provide students with the 21st century learning environments they deserve,” said John Covington, Superintendent of the Kansas City , Missouri School District . “The bonds will assist us in providing a safe, nurturing and improved educational environment that enhances and supports academic achievement.”

“Recovery Act school construction bonds provide low-cost borrowing to build and upgrade schools, which is a win-win for communities across the country,” said Deputy Treasury Secretary Neal Wolin. “The projects funded with these bonds create jobs today building modern schools to prepare our kids for the global economy of tomorrow.”

"Preparing students to compete in the global economy requires improvements in all aspects of our nation's education system, including the environments in which they learn," added Education Deputy Secretary Tony Miller. "The Recovery Act is keeping teachers in the classroom and, through the construction bond program, making lasting investments in the quality of our schools. Our kids deserve no less."

Created by the Recovery Act, qualified school construction bonds help state and local governments obtain low-cost financing for much needed public school improvements and construction. Investors who buy these bonds receive Federal income tax credits at prescribed tax credit rates in lieu of interest. These tax credit bonds essentially allow state and local governments to borrow without incurring interest costs.

The Recovery Act provided for the issuance of $11 billion of qualified school construction bonds by states and large local educational agencies in 2009 and $11 billion in 2010. The 2010 allocations include $6.6 billion of bonding authority to the 50 states and the remaining $4.4 billion was allocated the nation’s 103 largest local educational agencies, including Kansas City , Missouri.

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Comments

  1. we need $ for better teachers. Not more contruction. this is the same thing that happened in the 70s. lots of contruction jobs doled out as political favors. students just got screwed for another few decades.

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  2. So this makes up for the car, right?

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  3. Absolutely right 8:00

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  4. Covington is on the right track. Its not about funding. Amato told us that about six months before the board fired him.They spent millions on wasteful taxpayer money on physical improvements when the problem was internal.....

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  5. Nice! That's the way to do it Congressman Cleaver! Great work!

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  6. Cleaver is KC's No.1 nigger!

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  7. How many pimped out cleavermobiles will the district get?

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  8. please plan and check it twice before a dime of that money goes to ANYONE!
    do the following:

    TRANSPARENCY IN ALL THINGS, MANAGE AND REPORT ON EVERY DIME THAT IS ALLOCATED.

    PROSECUTE SHADY PAY OUTS AND OFF

    PLEASE DON'T BUILD OR RENOVATE ANOTHER DAMN BUILDING! that last de-segration $$$ walked in the front and out the back doors

    PAY TEACHERS WHO TEACH AND INCENTIVIZE THEM TO INNOVATE, GET RID OF THOSE WHO ARE TREADING WATER we can't afford it

    PLEASE THINK OF OUR CHILDREN, THEY ARE THIS CITY'S FUTURE
    WE MUST INVEST IN OUR FUTURE THROUGH THEM NOW, THERE'S NOT A SECOND TO LOOSE.

    Change MUST Come to Kansas City Missouri

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  9. Dumb shit. "Let's throw money at a dysfunctional, broke-dick organization so can hurtle itself into the abyss with style."

    Rims, bro. We gotsta have rims on dem busses.

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  10. This is no new news. The 16 million was announced prior to the right-sizing. I bet it all goes to HNTB/Dunn for support with the advertising campaign.

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  11. We've already spent billions in the district to watch it implode... this is just Cleaver pandering to the electorate; nothing more, and certainly a lot less than what we need.

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  12. Because throwing money at this school district has worked so well before.

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  13. Well let's see if you have a job programfor white people that's good, but if it is a job program for black & brown that's patronage and back door deals. At least race does matter in KC

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