The missing funds accounted for at least $26,930,000 of Philadelphia’s school district budget last year. Title II-A, which supports teacher training and recruitment, provided $70 million to Pennsylvania and $9.13 million to Philadelphia in 2024; Title III-A, which supports language instruction for English-learning students, accounted for $20 million statewide and $4.6 million to Philly; Title IV-A, which supports academic enrichment, school conditions, student well-being and technology use, delivered $55 million to the state, $13.2 million of which went to Philly schools.
That’s in addition to the $12.6 million through Title IV-B, which was set to be distributed among dozens of Out-of-School Time providers in Philadelphia. Those dollars fund free after-school and summer enrichment programs, which are critical for working families struggling to afford childcare. Providers such as the Sunrise of Philadelphia are unsure whether they can maintain their after-school programs if their expected funding never arrives.
“We still have a lot of unanswered questions and don’t quite know what to tell our families yet,” Morgyn Yates, director of K-12 programs at Sunrise, said.
Dozens of staff positions at Pennsylvania’s Department of Education are funded through the withheld funding streams and are now also at risk, according to court documents. That includes 18 employees paid through Title II-A alone.
What does the Supreme Court DOE ruling mean?
The Supreme Court’s ruling does not amount to an immediate change to DOE functions because the nearly 1,400 affected employees have already been off-duty and in limbo since March. Among them is the entire staff of Philadelphia’s regional outpost for the DOE’s Office for Civil Rights.
The Trump administration issued terminations in March, placing those employees on administrative leave with full pay and benefits until June 9. In May, Massachusetts U.S. District Judge Myong Joun ordered the employees to be reinstated, arguing that the layoffs were functionally an attempt to dismantle the DOE — which only Congress has the right to do. DOE officials went through the motions of compliance, telling employees via email that they were planning to bring them back to work, while still appealing the case in court. Then, on Monday, the Supreme Court granted an emergency application from the Trump administration and blocked Judge Joun’s ruling.