Dayana mentioned that stability has helped her study English. “As a result of my English improved right here. The lecturers helped me rather a lot right here.”
Roughly 1.4 million U.S. pre-Ok-12 college students skilled homelessness within the 2022-’23 college 12 months, in line with the newest federal information. Schooling regulation defines homelessness as missing a “fastened, common, and sufficient nighttime residence” — which incorporates households residing doubled up with others.
McKinney-Vento gives additional assist, via authorized protections and a federal grant program, to ensure these college students get an training.
However because the Trump administration works to shut the U.S. Schooling Division, which oversees McKinney-Vento, advocates concern the regulation’s protections might be eradicated, too.
“And in the event that they don’t exist anymore, then which means we revert again to 30 years in the past the place youngsters languished in shelters, they languished on couches and automobiles, as a result of they weren’t truly at school,” mentioned Barbara Duffield, government director of SchoolHouse Connection, a nationwide nonprofit that advocates for homeless youth.

The Trump administration hasn’t mentioned what it plans to do with McKinney-Vento if it succeeds in closing the Schooling Division, and the division didn’t reply to questions from NPR about its plans for the regulation and federal grant program.
This week, a bunch of Home Democrats and a pair Republicans issued a letter urging their colleagues to help the regulation and improve federal funding in it.
Trump’s “skinny” finances proposal launched earlier this month would consolidate 18 federal teaching programs right into a block grant, nevertheless it doesn’t identify these applications. And the White Home didn’t reply to NPR’s request for readability round whether or not McKinney-Vento was considered one of them.
Whether it is, Duffield mentioned, “It successfully would repeal this system in its entirety, eradicating protections and devoted funding [for students experiencing homelessness].”
An Island Oasis for households experiencing homelessness
Final 12 months, Congress put aside $129 million for McKinney-Vento grants to assist faculties cowl the prices of supporting college students experiencing homelessness.
Dayana’s college district, Middletown Public Colleges, acquired $65,000 in McKinney-Vento funds.
Megan Mainzer is the district’s McKinney-Vento liaison, tasked with figuring out college students experiencing homelessness and ensuring they obtain the sources they’re entitled to below the regulation.

She mentioned the district’s McKinney-Vento cash helps pay for transportation, scholarships for after-school care, hotspots, fuel and groceries for households.
It has additionally helped Mainzer launch and workers a meals pantry – in partnership with the native Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Group Middle – at Middletown Excessive College, the place Dayana attends.
It’s known as the Island Oasis.
The intense blue room subsequent to the highschool cafeteria has a freezer stuffed with frozen meat and seafood, a fridge with milk and eggs, pantry staples like rice and beans, and loads of snacks.
“I felt like I can’t management the housing points, however I can management having the ability to assist households offset their prices by serving to them cowl their meals payments in order that they’ll put more cash in direction of housing,” Mainzer mentioned.

It’s a useful resource John and his 11-year-old son depend on. John requested NPR to not use his full identify due to the stigma related to homelessness.
He mentioned he and his son have been residing in motels in each Middletown and Newport because the pipes burst of their dwelling, making it uninhabitable. He hasn’t discovered an inexpensive place for them to lease, and the pantry and the grocery retailer playing cards he’s acquired from Mainzer have “made an enormous distinction,” he mentioned.
“As a result of lodges usually are not low-cost, so some huge cash goes there,” John mentioned. “And I’ve a pleasure factor, so I really feel like I received’t attain out, however [Mainzer] attain[es] out to me.”
“All of it retains me up at night time,” one administrator says
Mainzer is deeply involved that the regulation and the federal funding that helps college students like Dayana and households like John’s are in danger. Dropping McKinney-Vento “would have an effect on our potential to assist households,” she mentioned.
She’s not the one one who’s fearful. McKinney-Vento liaisons and advocates throughout the nation are additionally anxious that if the Schooling Division is eradicated, the regulation itself might be rescinded. Even when the regulation stays, they’re fearful federal funding for it might be lower.

“It’s terrifying,” mentioned Susie Terry, the coordinator for homeless training providers for the San Diego County Workplace of Schooling. College districts in her county have recognized greater than 23,000 college students experiencing homelessness.
“All of it retains me up at night time. I feel that the dismantling of the [Education] Division and or the dismantling of this system — the funding for this system — might be my largest concern proper now,” she mentioned.
Terry mentioned districts that obtain federal grant cash use it to pay for issues like transportation and to offset the salaries of McKinney-Vento liaisons.
“And it’s not sufficient [money] by a protracted shot,” she mentioned, however the cash faculties do obtain is essential.
Jennifer Cress-Slife, the McKinney-Vento liaison for the Cedar Rapids Group College District in Iowa, mentioned the regulation has made an enormous distinction for her college students.
“The scholars that we see receiving homeless designations are already our most susceptible,” she mentioned. Her district has recognized about 430 college students experiencing homelessness this college 12 months.
She mentioned the rights they’re entitled to imply they’ve simpler entry to an training.
“And dropping any of that may make an enormous distinction,” Cress-Slife explains. She worries not all college districts would proceed to offer these protections within the absence of a federal mandate.
With out the regulation and the federal funding for it, “there can be greater charges of scholars failing,” mentioned Sabra Emde, the McKinney-Vento liaison for Ardmore Metropolis Colleges in southern Oklahoma. Her district has recognized 166 college students experiencing homelessness this 12 months.
“There can be greater charges of scholars who simply flat out weren’t attending college,” Emde mentioned.
A couple of situations for what comes subsequent
Maura McInerney, authorized director on the Schooling Legislation Middle, a nonprofit advocacy group in Pennsylvania, explains what’s at stake if the Schooling Division disappears:
“Dismantling the Division of Schooling implies that we don’t have folks on the federal degree guaranteeing that youngsters experiencing homelessness are receiving the ensures of [McKinney-Vento].”
If the division stays, however the funding for McKinney-Vento is lumped right into a block grant, she mentioned college districts would be capable to spend that cash on issues that don’t have anything to do with serving homeless college students.
“It wouldn’t include the necessities that they adjust to the regulation — that they’re following McKinney-Vento, and that it’s used for youngsters experiencing homelessness,” McInerney defined.
Aaron Tang, a regulation professor on the College of California Davis, mentioned he’s extra involved the Trump administration will resolve to unilaterally withhold McKinney-Vento grant funding from states — which may have dire penalties for college kids.
“Each time you elevate a barrier to funding a program, it will increase the percentages that this system’s recipients – the oldsters who’re presupposed to be served, the youngsters on this case – received’t get the providers they want.”
In the meantime, ninth grader Dayana and her household lately discovered everlasting housing.
She mentioned she’s grateful for the help she acquired during the last 5 years from Megan Mainzer, her McKinney-Vento liaison. Mainzer helped her enroll in center college, linked her with friends who’ve since change into shut mates, supplied clothes and delivered groceries to her dwelling, and coordinated transportation to and from college.
Dayana mentioned the impression of those sources have been life-changing for college kids like her.