Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 6— - AMERICAN PRINTING HOUSE FOR THE BLIND › § 102
The Secretary of Education must pay half of the yearly appropriation twice a year to the trustees of the American Printing House for the Blind in Louisville, Kentucky, after the trustees’ president requests it and the treasurer co-signs. The money must be used each year to make and supply books and other teaching materials made for blind students. Those materials must be shared among all public and private nonprofit schools and programs for blind pupils in the States, Territories, possessions, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia. Each school or chief State school officer gets a share based on the number of blind pupils it serves compared to the total number of blind pupils nationwide. That pupil count is fixed on the first Monday in January each year and must be verified when the trustees ask. The appropriation may not pay to build or rent buildings, and no profit can be added to the price of materials—items must be sold only at their actual cost. A small part of the money may pay staff and committee expenses. The Secretary of the Treasury can stop payments if the funds are not used properly. Before any money is paid, the Printing House treasurer must give a bond of $20,000 with two approved sureties and renew it every two years. Superintendents of public schools for the blind and chief State school officers (or their designees) serve as members of the Printing House board for administering these rules. Definitions (one line each): an institution for the education of the blind — a school for blind students (or blind plus other handicapped students with special classes); chief State school officer — the State superintendent of public schools or an official the Governor names; blind pupil — a blind student in a program below college level.
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Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 102
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73