But the concern from agencies that handle refugee re-settlement is the potential to
lose federal funding due to the travel ban.
Whether any school district would
lose federal funding due to a growing number of parents choosing to opt their children out of taking annual tests required by the federal government is not clear.
An annual average of just over 200,000 affordable units are expected to
lose federal funding due to expiration under their respective affordable programs over the next 10 years, with the majority of those units conceived under the Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC).
Not exact matches
The report released Monday as part of a collaborative study between the Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health Policy, part of the School of Public Health and Health Services at George Washington University, and the RCHN Community Health Foundation, reveals that
due to
federal budget cuts through sequestration, the nation's 1,200 community health programs will
lose $ 120 million in
funding.
And finally and perhaps most importantly FairTest, explains that it is, «not aware of a single school that
lost federal Title I
funds due to low test - taking rates, including many in New York that had large numbers of opt outs last year.»
FairTest is not aware of a single school that
lost federal Title I
funds due to low test - taking rates, including many in New York that had large numbers of opt outs last year.
In fact, no school has ever
lost Title I
funds due to punishment by the
federal government for missing the 95 percent participation rate.
Impact Aid provides
funding to school districts that have
lost local tax revenue (which traditionally
funds public schools)
due to the presence of
federal tax - exempt land, such as military installations, Native American reservations, or national parks.
Since S&P 500 index
funds set a record high on Jan. 26, they've
lost about 8 per cent
due to a combination of fears about a possible trade war and a more aggressive
Federal Reserve.
Best would be to continue the
funds that have been granted by Congress to replace the
lost revenue
due to the virtual end of logging on these
federal lands (a portion of revenue paid by the feds to compensate for
lost property tax revenue since
federal lands aren't subject to state property taxes).