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 › § 7221c
The Secretary must use at least 50 percent of the reserved funds to give, by competition, at least 3 grants to the best applicants. The goal is to try new ways to help charter schools get loans or bonds to buy, build, or fix school buildings. Eligible applicants are public agencies, private nonprofits, or partnerships of those. Applications are judged by the Secretary and must explain what the applicant will do, how charter schools helped design the plan, the applicant’s financing and education experience, how the plan will bring in private money and offer better loan terms, and, for States, what they will do to make sure charter schools get needed facilities funding. Grant money must be put in a reserve account and used to guarantee or insure loans or leases, find or encourage private lenders, or help issue bonds for charter school projects. Money in the account must be kept in low-risk investments and any earnings stay in the account. Up to 2.5 percent of a grant may pay administrative costs. Recipients must keep books by normal accounting rules, have yearly independent audits, and send annual reports with financial statements, audit results, evaluations of how federal money leveraged private funds, lists of schools served, and descriptions of lenders. The Secretary will review reports and send a yearly report to Congress. Any debts made by a grantee are not federal obligations. If a grantee fails to make substantial progress after at least 2 years, or stops using funds for the intended purpose, the Secretary may recover the reserve funds under federal rules. After those grants, the Secretary may give competitive grants to States to set up or improve per-pupil facilities aid programs for charter schools, for periods up to 5 years. The Federal share of costs can be up to 90 percent the first year, 80 percent the second, 60 percent the third, 40 percent the fourth, and 20 percent the fifth. A State may work with partners who can cover up to 50 percent of the State’s share. A State may get more than one grant if total funding to charter schools grows. A State may keep up to 5 percent of its grant for evaluations, technical help, and sharing information. Federal funds must add to, not replace, State or local funding. States do not have to participate, and must apply and meet the law’s requirements to be eligible.
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Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 7221c
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73