Published: Oct. 14, 2020, 8:45 p.m.
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Why we still don\\u2019t have a second pandemic relief bill. What the funding holdup means for schools. And how rushing this year\\u2019s census could shape our democracy for years to come.
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As talks sour over the economic recovery package, public schools are once again bracing to lose out on tens of billions of dollars of federal aid \\u2014
money they say they desperately need to reopen as they face mounting costs and shrinking budgets. \\u201cWe saw a ton of rhetoric, particularly from the Trump administration, about how important it was to reopen schools in order to restart the economy,\\u201d says education reporter Moriah Balingit. \\u201cThere has not been money that has followed that rhetoric.\\u201d
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to end the 2020 Census count early, putting an end to the contentious legal battle over the once-in-a-decade household count. Courts reporter Robert Barnes
explains the vast implications of an undercount.
As the general election draws nearer, millions of people are figuring out how to vote for the first time or vote by mail for the first time. And the rules are changing fast, as states figure out how to adjust to the pandemic.
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