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How the abolition of the educational department could influence how Ohio could affect

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Columbus, Ohio (Wcmh) – The United States’s Supreme Court decided on Monday that the Trump government can continue its process Reduction of the US Education Ministry of Education By putting more than 1,000 workers off.

Some may now wonder how these cuts could affect Ohio, with both sides of the debate have different answers.

Republican strategist Bob Clegg pursues the president’s decisions in the federal education department. He said the elimination of the department would give local school districts more power over their curriculum and financing.

“We have so much bureaucracy that nothing is being done because you have to jump through so many tires,” said Clegg. “To get the federal government out of our education system only means that we have to have fewer tires through which we have to jump.”

The Vice President of the Ohio Education Association (OEA), Jeff Wensing, said that the Bundesstipendien programs managed that provide funds for career-tech programs, post-school care and lend a hand the students with disabilities or families with low income.

Wensing said that these cuts come at a time when the budget in Ohio assigns a decade of percentage percentage to finance public education.

“In our view, we are underfunded by the state. This may also reduce our federal financing,” said Wensing. “Reducing educational opportunities and resources for our students is simply not a good thing.”

CLEGG said that it would not abolish federal financing to get rid of the Ministry of Education (doe); Instead, the money would go to the states or to another government agency.

In the 50 years since the department was founded, CLEGG said that the impact on the local school districts were minimal. He said schools should not be afraid of reducing the department.

“If you eliminate something that was not so effective, it won’t really affect you,” said Clegg. “The local effects here in Ohio and on site will be that we only have less state regulation, fewer state rules that have to be implemented that cost money.”

Wensing and the OEA said that there is not much trust between public educators and the state of Ohio. It is therefore scary to put this federal dollar in danger.

“I think there are many things in the air, but what I know – with less money from the state, less money from the federal government, is not good for Ohio’s students,” said Wensing. “It is not good for the communities of Ohio.”

At the moment both CLEGG and Wensing said that there is still a lot of uncertainty about what the immediate effects in Ohio and all over the country will still have. About 10% of public school financing come from the Doe.

The department was not abolished at this point and this case is still working through the Federal Court of Justice. With the decision of the Supreme Court, almost 1,400 employees who had been paid for months are completely dismissed.

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