Ashe County, North Carolina, and thousands of other school districts are scrambling after a freeze on nearly $7bn.
In the time it took to read an email, the federal money vanished before Eisa Cox's eyes: dollars that supported the Ashe County, North Carolina, school district's after-school program, training for its teachers, and salaries for some jobs.
The email from the US Department of Education arrived 30 June, one day before the money - $1.1m in total - was set to materialize for the rural western district. Instead, the dollars were frozen pending a review to make sure the money was spent "in accordance with the President's priorities," the email said.
In a community still recovering from Hurricane Helene, where more than half of students are considered economically disadvantaged, Cox said there was no way they could replace that federal funding for the school system she oversees as superintendent. "It is scary to think about it," she said. "You're getting ready to open school and not have a significant pot of funds."
School leaders across the country were reeling from the same news. The $1.1m was one small piece of a nearly $7bn pot of federal funding for thousands of school districts that the Trump administration froze - money approved by Congress and that schools were scheduled to receive on 1 July. For weeks, leaders in Ashe County and around the country scrambled to figure out how they could avoid layoffs and fill financial holes - until the money was freed on 25 July, after an outcry from legislators and a lawsuit joined by two dozen states.
"I had teachers crying, staff members crying. They thought they were going to lose their jobs a week before school," said Curtis Finch, superintendent of Deer Valley unified school district in Phoenix, Arizona.
Now, as students are back in classrooms, their school systems can no longer count on federal dollars as they once did. They must learn to plan without a playbook under a president intent on cutting education spending. For many districts, federal money is a small but crucial sliver of their budgets, potentially touching every part of a school's operations, from teacher salaries to textbooks. Nationally, it accounts for about 14% of public school funding; in Ashe County, it's 17%. School administrators are examining their resources now and budgeting for losses to funding that was frozen this summer, for English learners and for after-school and other programs.
So far, the Trump administration has not proposed cutting the largest pots of federal money for schools, which go to services for students with disabilities and to schools with large numbers of low-income students. But the current budget proposal from the US House of Representatives would do just that.
At the same time, forthcoming cuts to other federal support for low-income families under the Republican One Big, Beautiful Bill Act - including Medicaid and Snap, previously known as food stamps - will also hammer schools that have many students living in poverty. Some school districts are also grappling with the elimination of Department of Education grants announced earlier this year, such as those designed to address teacher shortages and disability services. In politically conservative communities like this one, there's an added tension for schools that rely on federal money to operate: how to sound the alarm while staying out of partisan politics.
For Ashe County, the federal spending freeze collided with the district's attempt at a fresh start after the devastation of Helene, which demolished roads and homes, damaged school buildings and knocked power and cell service out for weeks. Between the storm and snow days, students here missed 47 days of instruction.
Cox worries this school year might bring more missed days. That first week of school, she found herself counting the number of foggy mornings: an old Appalachian wives' tale says to put a bean in a jar for every morning of fog in August. The number of beans at the end of the month is how many snow days will come in winter.
"We've had 21 so far," Cox said with a nervous laugh on 21 August.
Fragrant evergreen trees blanket Ashe County's hills, a region that bills itself as America's Christmas tree capital because of the millions of Fraser firs grown for sale at the holidays. Yet this picturesque area still shows scars of Hurricane Helene's destruction: fallen trees, damaged homes and rocky new paths cut through the mountainsides by mudslides. Nearly a year after the storm, the lone grocery store in one of its small towns is still being rebuilt. A sinkhole that formed during the flooding remains, splitting open the ground behind an elementary school.
As students walked into classrooms for the first time since spring, Julie Taylor - the district's director of federal programs - was reworking district budget spreadsheets. When federal funds were frozen, and then unfrozen, her plans and calculations from months prior became meaningless.
Federal and state funding stretches far in this district of 2,700 students and six schools, where administrators do a lot with a little. Even before this summer, they worked hard to supplement that funding in any way possible - applying for state and federal grants, like one last year that provided money for a few mobile hotspots for families who don't have internet access. Such opportunities are also narrowing: the Federal Communications Commission, for example, recently proposed ending its mobile hotspot grant program for school buses and libraries.
"We're very fiscally responsible because we have to be. We're small and rural. We don't have a large tax base," Taylor said.
When the money was frozen this summer, administrators' minds went to the educators and kids who would be most affected. Some of it was meant to pay for a program through Appalachian State University that connects the district's three dozen early career teachers with a mentor, helping them learn how to schedule their school days and manage classroom behavior.
The program is part of the reason the district's retention rate for early career teachers is 92%, Taylor said, noting the teachers have said how much the mentoring meant to them.
Also frozen: free after-school care the district provides for about 250 children throughout the school year - the only after-school option in the community. Without the money, Cox said, schools would have had to cancel their after-school care or start charging families, a significant burden in a county with a median household income of about $50,000.
The salary for Michelle Pelayo, the district’s migrant education program coordinator for nearly two decades, was also tied up in that pot of funding. Because agriculture is the county’s biggest industry, Pelayo’s work extends far beyond the students at the school. Each year, she works with the families of dozens of immigrant students who move to the county for seasonal work on farms, which generally involves tagging and bundling Christmas trees and harvesting pumpkins. Pelayo helps the families enroll their students, connects them with supplies for school and home, and serves as a Spanish translator for parent-teacher meetings - “whatever they need”, she said.
Kitty Honeycutt, executive director of the Ashe County chamber of commerce, doesn't know how the county's agriculture industry would survive without the immigrant families Pelayo works with. "The need for guest workers is crucial for the agriculture industry. We have to have them," she said.
A couple of years ago, Pelayo had the idea to drive to Boone, North Carolina, where Appalachian State University's campus sits, to gather unwanted appliances and supplies from students moving out of their dorm rooms at the end of the year to donate to immigrant families. She's a “find a way or make a way” type of person, Honeycutt said.
Cox is searching for how to keep Pelayo on if Ashe County loses these federal funds next year. She's talked with county officials to see whether they could pay Pelayo's salary, and has begun calculating how much the district would need to charge families to keep the after-school program running. Ideally, she'd know ahead of time and not the night before the district is set to receive the money.
Districts across the country are grappling with similar questions. In Detroit, school leaders are preparing, at a minimum, to lose Title III money to teach English learners; more than 7,200 Detroit students received services funded by Title III in 2023.
In Wyoming, the small, rural Sheridan County School District 3 is trying to budget without Title II, IV and V money - funding for improving teacher quality, updating technology and resources for rural and low-income schools, among other uses,” Superintendent Chase Christensen said.
Schools are trying to budget for cuts to other federal programs too,such as Medicaidand food stamps.In Harrison School District 2 ,an urban district in Colorado Springs ,Colorado ,schools rely onMedicaidto provide studentswith counseling,nursingandotherservices .
The district projects that it could lose halfthe $15m it receivesinMedicaidnextschoolyear .
"It's very ,very stressful ,"said Wendy Birhanzel ,superintendentofHarrison schooldistrict2 ."For awhile ,it waseveryday you were hearing somethingdifferent .And you couldn't even keep upwith:'What'sthe latest informationtoday ?'That'sanother thing wetold our staff :if you can ,just don't watch thenews about education right now ."
There's another calculation for school leaders to make in conservative counties like Ashe ,where72%ofthe vote last yearwentto DonaldTrump :objectingto cutswithout angering voters .WhenNorth Carolina's attorney general ,a Democrat ,joinedthe lawsuitagainstthe administration overthe frozenfunds this summer ,some school administrators told state officials they couldn't publicly sign on ,fearing local backlash ,said Jack Hoke ,executive directorofNorth Carolina School Superintendents'Association .
Cox sees the effort to slash federal funds as a chance to show her community how Ashe County schools uses this money. She believes people are misguided in thinking their schools don't need it, not malicious.
"I know who our congresspeople are. I know they care about this area," Cox said ,adding that they care even if they do not fully grasp howthe moneyisused ."It'san opportunityforme toeducatethem."
If the education department is shuttered - which Trump said he plans to do in order to give more authority over education to states - she wants to be included in state-level discussions of how federal money flows to schools through North Carolina. Importantly ,she also wants to know ahead of time what her schools might lose.
As she made her rounds to each ofthe schools that first week back ,Cox glanced down at her phoneand looked upwithasmile .“Wehave hot water ,”shesaid while walkingin the hallofBlue Ridge elementaryschool .Ithad lost hot watera few weeks earlier ,buttoCox,thiscrisiswasminor—oneofmanyfirst-of-the-yearhiccups shehascome toexpect .
Still,it’soneworry shecanputoutofhermindasshelooksaheadtoayearofuncertainties.