Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 22— - BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS PROGRAMS › § 2007
Requires the Secretary to make a rule that decides the minimum yearly money each Bureau-funded school needs. The rule must look at how many eligible Indian students and total students the school has, and at special cost factors (like isolation, extra staff or transport, food and housing, building repairs, dorm costs, longer staff service, therapy programs, and gifted-and-talented needs). The rule must also cover the cost of giving education equal to nearby public schools, whether the money will let the school meet accreditation standards, and any other relevant factors. After new standards in section 2002 are set, the Secretary must update the formula to pay for those standards. By January 1, 2003, the Secretary must review the formula and take steps to increase counseling and therapy in off-reservation dorm schools and check that parents are properly notified and give consent. For fiscal year 2003 and later, the formula must use specific adjustments: count each 7th–8th grader as 1.2 students; treat any school with under 50 eligible Indian students as having 50 for small-school funding; allow shorter-than-9-month residential programs if the school board and supervisor agree; count each full-time gifted student as 2.0 students; and count each student in a year-long Indian language course as 0.25 students after the school board certifies the course and Congress provides funds for the adjustment. Local school boards may set aside either $8,000 or the lesser of $15,000 or 1% of their allotment. New school board members must get 40 hours of training within one year. The Secretary must reserve 1% of yearly funds for emergencies; those funds can only be used for education services or emergency repairs, stay available until spent, and the total reserve from all years can’t exceed 1% of current year funds. Money for general local operations is distributed pro rata under the formula. An “eligible Indian student” must meet three tests: tribal membership or at least one-fourth Indian blood, live on or near a reservation or qualify for off-reservation dorm attendance, and be enrolled in a Bureau-funded school. Eligible students cannot be charged tuition. Non-eligible students may attend only under limits (no harm to the program, school board agrees, certain employee dependents, or tuition paid equal to nearby public out-of-district rates and added to the school’s funding). Contract or grant schools may admit non-eligible students and keep any tuition in addition to their regular funding. At a school board’s choice, up to 15% of a school’s allocated funds may be kept without a yearly spending deadline. Tuition for out-of-State students at the Richfield dorm who attend Sevier County high schools will be paid from these funds up to the weighted student amount, and no extra administrative money will be provided for that instruction.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 2007
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73