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Description: Tags: Kansas
Description: Tags: Kansas
Description: Tags: Kansas
Maximum Required
Expenditures For
Choice-Related Maximum Per-Child
Transportation Expenditure For
FY 2005 Title I And Supplemental Supplemental
LEA ID District Allocation* Educational Services** Educational Services***
2011640 SHAWNEE MISSION PUB SCH USD 512 1,176,654 235,331 797.73
2011700 SILVER LAKE USD 372 15,678 3,136 922.25
2011430 SKYLINE SCHOOLS USD 438 79,759 15,952 1,993.96
2000007 SMITH CENTER USD 237 90,405 18,081 1,558.71
2011010 SMOKY HILL USD 302 35,072 7,014 1,753.59
2000002 SMOKY VALLEY USD 400 79,520 15,904 1,136.00
2011760 SOLOMON USD 393 83,649 16,730 1,467.52
2008130 SOUTH BARBER USD 255 118,014 23,603 1,685.91
2007470 SOUTH BROWN COUNTY USD 430 177,031 35,406 1,639.17
2011790 SOUTH HAVEN USD 509 49,134 9,827 1,694.27
2000001 SOUTHEAST OF SALINE USD 306 21,950 4,390 783.91
2006510 SOUTHERN CLOUD USD 334 71,201 14,240 1,514.91
2006930 SOUTHERN LYON COUNTY USD 252 42,032 8,406 1,200.92
2011820 SPEARVILLE USD 381 22,944 4,589 1,207.60
2011850 SPRING HILL USD 230 52,472 10,494 971.70
2011880 ST FRANCIS COMM SCH USD 297 65,624 13,125 1,562.47
2011910 ST JOHN-HUDSON USD 350 40,007 8,001 1,600.29
2011970 STAFFORD USD 349 95,839 19,168 1,597.32
2007860 STANTON COUNTY USD 452 93,644 18,729 1,463.19
2012030 STERLING USD 376 75,703 15,141 1,351.84
2012060 STOCKTON USD 271 97,163 19,433 1,518.17
2012090 SUBLETTE USD 374 89,586 17,917 1,337.11
2012120 SYLVAN GROVE USD 299 30,054 6,011 1,431.16
2012150 SYRACUSE USD 494 139,808 27,962 1,747.60
2012210 TONGANOXIE USD 464 69,844 13,969 1,746.10
2012260 TOPEKA PUBLIC SCHOOLS USD 501 4,700,327 940,065 1,740.22
2000013 TRIPLAINS USD 275 20,193 4,039 1,346.22
2012330 TROY PUBLIC SCHOOLS USD 429 45,074 9,015 1,609.78
2012360 TURNER-KANSAS CITY USD 202 494,161 98,832 1,141.25
2003960 TWIN VALLEY USD 240 75,000 15,000 1,442.31
2012390 UDALL USD 463 34,746 6,949 1,737.32
2012420 ULYSSES USD 214 296,664 59,333 1,639.03
2012450 UNIONTOWN USD 235 112,395 22,479 1,561.04
2012510 VALLEY CENTER PUB SCH USD 262 0 0 0.00
2012540 VALLEY FALLS USD 338 34,066 6,813 1,548.47
2012780 VALLEY HEIGHTS USD 498 91,755 18,351 1,456.43
2004560 VERMILLION USD 380 163,946 32,789 1,591.71
2012600 VICTORIA USD 432 36,401 7,280 2,600.07
2006060 WABAUNSEE EAST USD 330 119,250 23,850 1,370.69
2004470 WACONDA USD 272 40,250 8,050 1,341.66
2012630 WAKEENEY USD 208 82,193 16,439 1,826.51
2011610 WALLACE COUNTY SCHOOLS USD 241 47,574 9,515 1,399.25
2000003 WAMEGO USD 320 119,496 23,899 1,313.15
2012720 WASHINGTON SCHOOLS USD 222 55,340 11,068 1,383.50
2012750 WATHENA USD 406 69,011 13,802 1,380.21
2012840 WELLINGTON USD 353 257,872 51,574 1,357.22
2012870 WELLSVILLE USD 289 69,296 13,859 1,174.51
2012900 WESKAN USD 242 42,305 8,461 1,762.70
2007500 WEST ELK USD 282 125,080 25,016 1,690.27
Fiscal Year 2005 Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies - KANSAS
Maximum Required
Expenditures For
Choice-Related Maximum Per-Child
Transportation Expenditure For
FY 2005 Title I And Supplemental Supplemental
LEA ID District Allocation* Educational Services** Educational Services***
* Actual amounts received by LEAs will be smaller than shown here due to State-level adjustments to Federal Title I allocations. States adjust
allocations, for example, to reflect LEA boundary changes or the creation of new LEAs, including charter school LEAs, that are not accounted
for in the statutory calculations. States also are permitted to reserve up to 1 percent of allocations for administration and generally must
reserve 4 percent in fiscal year 2005 for school improvement activities. These adjustments will reduce the actual amounts available
under all three columns of the table.
** An LEA must use up to an amount equal to 20 percent of its Title I, Part A allocation (the “20-percent reservation”) received from the State
to cover choice-related transportation costs for students who exercise a choice option and to pay for supplemental educational services for
students whose parents request such services. The 20-percent reservation may include Title I, Part A funds or funding from other Federal,
State, local, and private sources. The amount shown in this column is the Department’s estimate of the amount that affected LEAs - those
with schools identified for improvement, corrective action, or restructuring - may have to spend to meet this requirement. Actual
expenditures will depend on such factors as the number of students exercising a choice option or receiving supplemental educational services and
the costs of satisfying these requests. An LEA has discretion to determine the allocation of these funds between choice-related transportation
and supplemental educational services, except that it must spend at least one-quarter of the 20-percent reservation - or an amount equal to
5 percent of its Title I, Part A allocation - on each activity if there is demand for both from students and their parents.
*** An LEA that must arrange for supplemental educational services is required to pay, for each child receiving services, the lesser of the actual cost
of the services or an amount equal to the LEA’s Title I, Part A allocation received from the State divided by the number of poor students in the
LEA, as determined by estimates produced by the US Bureau of the Census. Thus the amount shown in this column reflects the statutory “cap”
on per-child expenditures for supplemental educational services.