Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) allocation and expenditures by district in Delaware

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This page includes information and data on federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funding in Delaware. ESSER was a series of grants totaling roughly $190 billion that Congress sent to K-12 public schools during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. All 50 states closed schools to in-person instruction at some point during the 2019-2020 academic year.

Congress included the funding in three separate spending packages between 2020 and 2021. In an April 23, 2020, letter sent to state education commissioners, then-Education Secretary Betsy DeVos wrote: "The ESSER Fund provides you, and your local educational agencies, with emergency relief funds to address the impact that COVID-19 has had, and continues to have, on elementary and secondary schools."[1]

On this page, you will find data on the funding Congress allocated to STATE’s school districts through the three ESSER grants (I, II, and III). Data is made available by Georgetown University's Edunomics Lab.[2] Navigate the page using the following links:

Background

At the time, the $190 billion was the largest injection of federal funding into the education system in a one-year period.[3] The first of the three ESSER packages was created in March 27, 2020, when President Donald Trump (R) signed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, releasing $13.2 billion to schools. Trump signed the second ESSER package, providing roughly $54 billion through the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act, into law on December 27, 2020. President Joe Biden (D) signed the final ESSER package on March 11, 2021, apportioning $122 billion to schools through the American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act. Each of the three ESSER packages came with their own spending deadlines. Districts had until January 2025 to spend the last round of the funding, known as ESSER III.[4]

Congress placed few conditions on the grants, largely relying on districts to make their own spending decisions.[5] The exception to this was that Congress required districts to spend 20% of their ESSER III funds addressing “the academic impact of lost instructional time through the implementation of evidence-based interventions.”[6] Districts spent the funding in a variety of ways, including on afterschool programming, tutoring, professional development for teachers, mobile hotspots and other technologies, upgrading heating and air conditioning systems, and building new schools.[7]

Districts also reported using the funding to hire school psychologists, new teachers, custodians, and math specialists.[7] Some districts reported hiring contractors out of a concern about paying for permanent positions after the ESSER funding expired.[7] An August 2023 School Superintendents Association (AASA) survey found that 53% of respondents said they would need to cut support staff in response to the expiration of ESSER funding.[8] A 2024 survey of district leaders by the management consulting firm McKinsey & Company found that 53% of district leaders "expect a fiscal cliff in their district’s spending when ESSER concludes."[9]

ESSER I

The table below shows the total amount of ESSER I funding allocated to each district in Delaware.

STATE ESSER I allocation by district
District name Total ESSER I allocation
Academia Antonia Alonso $296,647
Academy of Dover Charter School $205,895
Appoquinimink School District $1,110,204
Brandywine School District $2,643,068
Caesar Rodney School District $2,149,093
Campus Community School $147,812
Cape Henlopen School District $1,361,167
Capital School District $2,997,113
Charter School of New Castle $336,984
Christina School District $6,109,833
Colonial School District $3,399,248
Delaware Military Academy $71,617
Delmar School District $228,525
Early College High School $144,667
East Side Charter School $299,385
First State Military Academy $82,407
First State Montessori Academy $110,310
Freire Charter School $201,449
Gateway Lab School $64,479
Great Oaks Charter School $222,593
Indian River School District $2,889,641
Kuumba Academy Charter School $390,007
Lake Forest School District $1,308,793
Las Americas ASPIRA $276,950
Laurel School District $811,594
Milford School District $1,401,073
MOT Charter School $20,209
New Castle County Vo-Tech School $1,190,505
Newark Charter School $154,012
Odyssey Charter $214,793
Polytech School District $152,242
Positive Outcomes Charter School $32,796
Providence Creek Academy Charter School $143,065
Red Clay Consolidated School District $5,300,064
Seaford School District $1,669,303
Smyrna School District $841,932
Sussex Academy of Arts and Science $50,683
Sussex Montessori School $108,467
Sussex Technical School District $160,514
The Charter School of Wilmington $12,891
Thomas A. Edison Charter School $495,489
Woodbridge School District $1,043,727


ESSER II

The table below shows the total amount of ESSER II funding allocated to each district in Delaware.

Delaware ESSER I allocation by district
District name Total ESSER I allocation
Academia Antonia Alonso $1,199,771
Academy of Dover Charter School $686,279
Appoquinimink School District $3,677,990
Brandywine School District $11,102,654
Caesar Rodney School District $8,238,657
Campus Community School $631,607
Cape Henlopen School District $5,104,337
Capital School District $11,901,474
Charter School of New Castle $1,365,880
Christina School District $23,733,024
Colonial School District $13,652,495
Delaware Military Academy $46,743
Delmar School District $1,184,193
Early College High School $457,996
East Side Charter School $1,279,174
First State Military Academy $324,041
First State Montessori Academy $189,966
Freire Charter School $817,525
Gateway Lab School $263,238
Great Oaks Charter School $798,281
Indian River School District $13,155,656
Kuumba Academy Charter School $1,607,776
Lake Forest School District $5,625,313
Las Americas ASPIRA $878,253
Laurel School District $3,825,323
Milford School District $5,815,099
MOT Charter School $93,871
New Castle County Vo-Tech School $4,636,365
Newark Charter School $265,089
Odyssey Charter $878,266
Polytech School District $679,698
Positive Outcomes Charter School $145,749
Providence Creek Academy Charter School $355,318
Red Clay Consolidated School District $20,875,827
Seaford School District $7,075,480
Smyrna School District $3,475,369
Sussex Academy of Arts and Science $203,532
Sussex Montessori School $435,583
Sussex Technical School District $776,325
The Charter School of Wilmington $52,273
Thomas A. Edison Charter School $2,083,080
Woodbridge School District $5,002,024

ESSER III

The table below shows the total amount of ESSER III funding allocated to each district in Delaware.

Delaware ESSER I allocation by district
District name Total ESSER I allocation
Academia Antonia Alonso $2,695,378
Academy of Dover Charter School $1,541,780
Appoquinimink School District $8,262,892
Brandywine School District $24,942,978
Caesar Rodney School District $18,508,784
Campus Community School $1,418,955
Cape Henlopen School District $11,467,290
Capital School District $26,737,589
Charter School of New Castle $3,068,556
Christina School District $53,318,089
Colonial School District $30,671,394
Delaware Military Academy $105,012
Delmar School District $2,660,381
Early College High School $1,028,924
East Side Charter School $2,873,764
First State Military Academy $727,984
First State Montessori Academy $426,773
Freire Charter School $1,836,633
Gateway Lab School $591,386
Great Oaks Charter School $1,793,401
Indian River School District $29,555,206
Kuumba Academy Charter School $3,611,993
Lake Forest School District $12,637,705
Las Americas ASPIRA $1,973,063
Laurel School District $8,593,886
Milford School District $13,064,074
MOT Charter School $210,889
New Castle County Vo-Tech School $10,415,954
Newark Charter School $595,544
Odyssey Charter $1,973,092
Polytech School District $1,526,995
Positive Outcomes Charter School $327,437
Providence Creek Academy Charter School $798,249
Red Clay Consolidated School District $46,899,171
Seaford School District $15,895,617
Smyrna School District $7,807,686
Sussex Academy of Arts and Science $457,252
Sussex Montessori School $978,571
Sussex Technical School District $1,744,074
The Charter School of Wilmington $117,435
Thomas A. Edison Charter School $4,679,801
Woodbridge School District $11,237,436

ESSER allocations by state

Click a state below to see a detailed breakdown of ESSER allocations by district in each state.

History of ESSER

Throughout Spring 2020, all 50 states shuttered K-12 public schools to in-person learning. In most states, students would not return to classrooms for the remainder of the academic year. Congress allocated roughly $190 billion to schools between March 2020 and March 2021 through three rounds of Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund grants.[10]

Congress also allocated about 10% of ESSER funding—or about $19 billion—to state education agencies.[11]

Each tranche of ESSER funding came with its own deadline. States had until September 30 to commit money they received in the third round (ARP Act) of ESSER funding—unless they requested and received an extension.[12] Districts were required to have spent the funds by the end of January 2025 (though they could request an extension from the federal government).[13]

According to the U.S. Department of Education, “These Federal emergency resources are available for a wide range of activities to address diverse needs arising from or exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, or to emerge stronger post-pandemic, including responding to students’ social, emotional, mental health, and academic needs and continuing to provide educational services as States, LEAs, and schools respond to and recover from the pandemic.”[14]

Districts, already facing declining public school enrollment, grappled with the loss of billions of dollars in federal aid as ESSER funds expired.[15] To put the loss in perspective, in 2019, the last year before Congress began allocating ESSER grants, the federal government spent a total of $57.9 billion on K-12 public schools—less than a third of what Congress allocated to schools through ESSER.[16]

A 2023 Education Next analysis of 22 states found that districts had spent about half of the money on labor costs, which could include new hires and raises for existing personnel.[17] A December 2023 Education Week survey of 250 district leaders found that a quarter of respondents said they didn’t anticipate finding alternative funding to cover ongoing expenses made with ESSER grants.[18]

Some districts announced staff and teacher layoffs due to losing ESSER funds.[19][20][21] Districts also cut expenses in other ways, including ending after-school programs, tutoring services, and more.[22][23]

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See also

Footnotes

  1. U.S. Department of Education, "ESSER Fund Cover Letter," accessed June 13, 2025
  2. Edunomics Lab,"ESSER Expenditure Dashboard," accessed June 29, 2025
  3. The 74, "ESSER Post-Mortem: How Did Districts Spend $190B in Federal Funds? Did It Work?" June 29, 2025
  4. Intercultural Development Research Association, "How Schools Will Be Impacted by the End of Federal COVID-19 Relief Funding," October 8, 2024
  5. District Administration, "Learning loss can still be overcome with ESSER," August 15, 2024
  6. U.S. Department of Education, "Strategies for Using American Rescue Plan Funding to Address the Impact of Lost Instructional Time," accessed August 21, 2025
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Government Accountability Office, "School Districts Reported Spending Initial COVID Relief Funds on Meeting Students' Needs and Continuing School Operations," accessed August 21, 2025
  8. Intercultural Development Research Association, "How Schools Will Be Impacted by the End of Federal COVID-19 Relief Funding," October 8, 2024
  9. McKinsey & Company, "When the money runs out: K–12 schools brace for stimulus-free budgets," September 18, 2024
  10. K-12 Dive, "ESSER funding: What it is and how to use it before it expires," February 21, 2023
  11. CCSSO, "States Leading: How State Education Agencies Leveraged Pandemic Relief Funds," accessed February 4, 2025
  12. New America, "Size: More Money Than Ever Before," accessed February 4, 2025
  13. School Superintendents Assocation, "The Advocate March 2024: ESSER Late Liquidation," March 8, 2024
  14. U.S. Department of Education, "Frequently Asked Questions," May 2021
  15. Brookings, "Breaking down enrollment declines in public schools," March 14, 2024
  16. United States Census, "K-12 School Spending Up 4.7% in 2019 From Previous Year," May 18, 2021
  17. Education Next, "The Massive ESSER Experiment: Here’s what we’re learning.," April 4, 2023
  18. Education Week, "When ESSER Funds Are Gone, Here’s Where Districts May Turn to Fill Gaps," December 5, 2023
  19. NBC DFW, "Arlington ISD faces layoffs with COVID-era ESSER grants coming to an end," March 25, 2024
  20. K-12 Dive, "Teacher layoffs are growing — and won’t be going away anytime soon," March 26, 2024
  21. CT Insider, "Hartford school board approves $429 million budget with staffing cuts across the district," April 18, 2024
  22. Chalkbeat, "Many schools want to keep tutoring going when COVID money is gone. How will they pay for it?" February 1, 2024
  23. KOSU, "The end of pandemic-era federal dollars may mean the end of some Oklahoma school programs," April 18, 2024