Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 70— - STRENGTHENING AND IMPROVEMENT OF ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - 21ST CENTURY SCHOOLS › Part Part C— - Expanding Opportunity Through Quality Charter Schools › § 7221b
Gives money to State-level groups so they can make subgrants that help start, copy, or grow high-quality charter schools and give technical help to applicants and to the agencies that authorize charter schools. The U.S. Secretary of Education awards these grants competitively to State entities. Each State entity must spend at least 90% of its grant on subgrants, set aside at least 7% for technical assistance and authorizer oversight, and use no more than 3% for admin. Grants and subgrants last up to 5 years, and subgrants may use up to 18 months for planning. The Secretary must give at least 3 grants each year when money is available, may review grants before the third year and reduce or reallocate funds if needed, and expects subgrants to reach urban, suburban, and rural areas and support varied school models. Using a weighted lottery to favor disadvantaged students is allowed if state law permits and the lottery is not used to create exclusive schools. State entities must apply and explain their goals, how they will open or replicate schools, inform and help applicants get other federal funds, plan for school closures, improve authorizing quality, ensure schools meet needs of students (including children with disabilities and English learners), and make school information public. State entities must promise that funded schools will have budget and operational flexibility, be monitored, get technical help, and share best practices. Subgrant money can pay for teacher and leader training and hiring during planning, supplies and technology, minor facility repairs, one-time startup transportation, recruitment, and other one-time start-up costs. No State entity can get a duplicate grant for a State already using one, and an individual charter school generally may get only one subgrant in any 5-year period unless it shows 3 years of improved student results. State entities must report at the end of year 3 (or year 2 if shorter) and at the end of the grant on students served, how goals were met, subgrant amounts and uses, and how they monitored and worked with authorizers.
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Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 7221b
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73