Ryan Walters' administration pursuing only those federal grants that align with 'Oklahoma values'

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OKLAHOMA CITY — The State Department of Education will not apply for federal grants that run counter to “Oklahoma values,” according to documents the state’s top education official has sent lawmakers.
The state agency says determining whether grants align with State Superintendent Ryan Walters’ priorities is a key component of deciding whether to seek federal financial aid for schools.
State legislators from both sides of the aisle say they have more questions than answers after Walters, a conservative firebrand, provided a status report detailing where his agency stands on applying for federal grants.
Rep. Melissa Provenzano, D-Tulsa, expressed concern that Walters, who has centered his administration on culture wars, will not apply for grants related to diversity, equity and inclusion efforts or those that could benefit LGBTQ students. Walters has railed against diversity initiatives in schools and taken aim at school library books that include LGBTQ issues.



“We are very diverse, and I can’t allow myself to think that we’re not going to apply for grants simply because of (political) buzzwords or because they would benefit people that look different or believe different things than our superintendent,” Provenzano said. “That would be unethical not to support everyone with these federal dollars.”
She and Rep. Ryan Martinez, R-Edmond, said they plan to reach out to the State Department of Education to seek clarity on the meaning of “Oklahoma values.”



Martinez, the vice chairman of the House Appropriations and Budget Committee, asked Walters in a recent legislative hearing to provide lawmakers with information on federal education grants.

When asked to elaborate on the meaning of “Oklahoma values” and give examples of any grants the state may pass on, Walters’ spokesman directed the Tulsa World to comments the superintendent made in the recent legislative hearing.

“I’m going to … ensure that every dollar that we accept is used for the best purpose for our parents, teachers and kids; that it is transparent so the taxpayers can see how the money is being spent; that there’s no strings attached to those funds that make them ineffective and tie the hands of our districts in a way that’s inappropriate,” Walters said in the hearing.
On the campaign trail last year, Walters said he would reject federal funding for Oklahoma schools, but he quickly walked back those comments. He has since been critical of federal funding that he says has any “left-wing indoctrination” strings attached by the Biden administration.



The State Department of Education will receive $3.3 billion in federal grants in the current fiscal year, according to documents provided by the agency. Most of those grants were secured by Walters’ predecessor, former State Superintendent Joy Hofmeister, lawmakers said.
Walters spokesman Justin Holcomb said the State Department of Education is not phasing out any grants applied for under Hofmeister’s administration. The agency will continue to reapply for all of those grants so long as those federal funding streams remain available, he said.

“Whatever can be applied for will be applied for,” Holcomb said.
Walters’ office said it is pursuing three new grants related to school safety, helping students with disabilities and using education data systems to improve classroom outcomes. Oklahoma would get roughly $12.7 million in grant funds over three to five years if the applications are approved, Holcomb said.


Walters also said his administration will pursue grants related to financial transparency; student mental health; parental rights; teacher recruitment and retention; and improving students’ reading and math proficiency and college and career readiness.
Martinez said he wants Walters to provide more information on grants for which his agency will apply and why his agency may pass on other grant opportunities. Martinez said he wants specifics beyond the rationale that a grant doesn’t align with “Oklahoma values.”
“Tell me what that means precisely,” he said, noting that the phrase is vague and open to interpretation.


With videos: "I don't care if people are triggered by what I say ... My job is to speak truth and find solutions to problems," the state superintendent tells a packed meeting room.


Among other things, the state receives federal grants to support special education programs, homeless students, school safety initiatives, and children in high-poverty and low-performing schools.

If the State Department of Education loses federal grant funding, lawmakers could be be left scrambling to fund certain programs with state dollars or those education programs could be canceled, Martinez noted.

Provenzano said some of her local districts still haven’t received award letters for some routine grants that weren’t included in the list of grants Walters sent to lawmakers.
“What grants are we not applying for? It’s a big question mark,” she said.
 

Tulsa World Newsroom podcast: Longtime grant writer says Ryan Walters lied to lawmakers, federal grant money for Oklahoma in jeopardy​


Tulsa World Staff Writers Andrea Eger and Carmen Forman report a longtime grant writer has shared with legislative leaders on both sides of the aisle claims that State Superintendent Ryan Walters lied to them at a recent public hearing. There are concerns that current and future federal grant funding for Oklahoma public school students is in jeopardy.
 

Despite Walters' promises, federal grants have stalled at Oklahoma education department, former staffers say​


From The Oklahoman

While telling lawmakers they wouldn’t consider federal grants that don’t align with “Oklahoma values,” leadership within the state Department of Education said internally they would avoid any grants with elements of diversity and inclusion, LGBTQ initiatives, social-emotional learning or trauma-informed practices, the agency’s former grant writer said.

This would represent a sea change in the department’s priorities from its previous administration while shaping the state agency around its new leader's political agenda.

Terri Grissom wrote applications for competitive federal grants for the state Education Department for five years until she left the agency April 18, netting more than $101.5 million in federal grants during her tenure.

Grissom and other former agency employees say state schools Superintendent Ryan Walters’ administration has slowed the grant process almost to a halt, despite Walters’ recent remarks to lawmakers that the department is diligently pursuing competitive federal grants.

“Lawmakers and the public need to understand that work is not getting done at the agency,” Grissom said.


The state Education Department disagrees that it is working too slowly, said its spokesperson, Justin Holcomb. He said transparency and oversight are “not something that should be rushed.”

“This administration will continue to exercise extensive oversight when it comes to federal grants,” Holcomb said.

The department said it will seek out grants that align with Walters’ priorities of school safety, accountability and student mental health, among other goals, according to information the agency provided to House lawmakers this week.

The Education Department won’t consider grants with requirements that “do not align with Oklahoma values.”

Grissom said Walters’ chief policy adviser, Matt Langston, told her the agency would avoid grant programs that emphasize diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) and other buzzwords that Walters has opposed.

“(Langston) said, ‘nothing DEI, nothing trauma informed, nothing social-emotional learning and nothing LGBTQ,’” Grissom recalled.
 
Oklahoma State Legislators are now trying to Reign in Walters on his policy of dropping out of Grants he defines as "Woke" and foregoing the money for those grants for Oklahoma.

The State House of Rep and the State Senate appropriations committees both passed unanimously a common Education Budget Bill yesterday. The new bill would require the Education Department that Ryan Walters heads to up get Joint Approval from both the Oklahoma House Speaker and the Senate President Pro Tem before the Dept of Education of Oklahoma foregoes any Federal Education Grants that have already been won by the State of Oklahoma OR if the Dept of Education declines to reapply for a Grant they have already been receiving prior to 2023.

“The State Department of Education shall not decline, refuse participation in, or choose not to apply for any federal grant funding that had been received by the Department prior to FY2023 without joint approval from the President Pro Tempore of the Oklahoma State Senate and the Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives,” states Senate Bill 36x, which was approved 20-0 on the Senate side and 34-0 in the House.
 
Reign that rabid Koch troll in. He and Betsy Devos are in league with each other. Kill public education, give the $ to parents who homeschool or send their kids to private and or religious schools.
Unless the State Constitution has been amended Ryan and his ilk are not only pushing tax breaks for wealthier citizens but are pushing an unconstitutional agenda. I paraphrase, “ not one dime of public money shall be spent on any religious school or preacher”. Yeah it’s about that clear. Our founders did not, and we should not tear down the wall of separation between church and state. Sick em Gentner!!! What happens when the Nazis want a school to promote their “religion”. Or the white supremacy school of intolerance, or God forbid the church of anti fascism. BLM might want to start a school. Once that door is open “fairness” dictates everyone takes public money FROM public schools. Please close the floodgates Gentner!!! On topic, the less grant monies coming in, the less money for public education.
 
Reign that rabid Koch troll in. He and Betsy Devos are in league with each other. Kill public education, give the $ to parents who homeschool or send their kids to private and or religious schools.
Unless the State Constitution has been amended Ryan and his ilk are not only pushing tax breaks for wealthier citizens but are pushing an unconstitutional agenda. I paraphrase, “ not one dime of public money shall be spent on any religious school or preacher”. Yeah it’s about that clear. Our founders did not, and we should not tear down the wall of separation between church and state. Sick em Gentner!!! What happens when the Nazis want a school to promote their “religion”. Or the white supremacy school of intolerance, or God forbid the church of anti fascism. BLM might want to start a school. Once that door is open “fairness” dictates everyone takes public money FROM public schools. Please close the floodgates Gentner!!! On topic, the less grant monies coming in, the less money for public education.
Pokey you may need therapy after I type the words I agree with you. If you want to send your child to a private school do it the old fashioned way, pay for it
 
Pokey you may need therapy after I type the words I agree with you. If you want to send your child to a private school do it the old fashioned way, pay for it
I’m sure we have more in common than not. Love our Cowboys for example. Go Pokes! Also love Ada! A bunch of Wife’s relatives buried there. Eat at Polos every time we go there.
 
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