President Bush Proposes Record $57 Billion for FY 2005 Education Budget
Largest dollar increase of any domestic agency
Proposed increases of $1 billion each for schools with disadvantaged children and special education students

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FOR RELEASE:
Feb. 2, 2004
Contact: Susan Aspey
Jim Bradshaw
(202) 401-1576

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Secretary's Remarks
President's FY 2005 Budget Request for ED
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President Bush today continued his commitment to America's students and their families by submitting a budget request for 2005 that provides $57.3 billion in discretionary funding for the U.S. Department of Education. The budget request includes an additional $1.7 billion--the largest dollar increase of any domestic agency--representing a 3 percent increase over 2004 and a 35.8-percent gain for education programs since the president took office.

The president's 2005 budget request continues to place a strong priority on assisting the nation's neediest students and includes historic funding increases to help states and school districts implement No Child Left Behind, the president's sweeping education reform law. The budget proposes a $1-billion increase in Title I grants to help the neediest local schools and a $1-billion increase for special education grants to states.

The 2005 request also includes $12.9 billion--an $823-million increase--for Pell Grants, to help an estimated 5.3 million students from low-income families pay for their higher education, which is one million more students than when the president took office. In total, student aid for higher education would increase to more than $73 billion--a $4.2 billion or 6-percent increase over 2004 levels. Almost 10 million students and parents--a 426,000 increase--would receive one or more grants, loans or work-study awards.

If approved by lawmakers, the $57.3 billion budget would be a 35.8-percent increase, from $42.2 billion in 2001 to the proposed $57.3 billion in 2005.

"President Bush has once again provided record support for our nation's students, parents, schools and teachers," Secretary Paige said. "In the last three years, we have witnessed watershed moments in education. I believe that one day, we will look back on these years and say that this was the turning point. In an historic partnership, the Department worked with all 50 states to develop accountability plans to ensure they will attend to the needs of all their students--every single one. Each state's plan reflects the unique circumstances of that state.

"The president and I share a vision. We believe that all children can learn. We believe that all children deserve the opportunity for a great education. I believe that today, at the start of the third year of the No Child Left Behind Act, we are closer to making that vision a reality.

"But just as we are demanding accountability of our schools, we are demanding the same of ourselves. Over the last three years, we have made some important management changes at the Department that required hard work and discipline. And because of a concerted effort on the part of the Department staff, taxpayers can rest assured that their hard-earned tax dollars will be managed responsibly."

Among the highlights of the 2005 budget request:

Implementation of No Child Left Behind

Improving Opportunities for Students with Disabilities

Accountability for Vocational and Adult Education

Enhancing Opportunities for Higher Education

Department Management

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Last Modified: 02/06/2004