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

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Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funding was a series of grants totaling roughly $190 billion that Congress sent to K-12 public schools during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Congress included the funding in three separate spending packages between 2020 and 2021. The first of these occurred 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. 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]

In response to the pandemic, all 50 states closed schools to in-person instruction between February and April 2020.

At the time, the $190 billion was the largest injection of federal funding into the education system in a one-year period.[2] 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.[3]

Congress placed few strings on the grants, largely relying on districts to make their own spending decisions.[4] The expiration of the ESSER funding posed a challenge to districts that allocated a relatively greater portion to recurring expenses, such as teacher salaries or new staff.[5] 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.[6] 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."[7]

On this page, you will find data on the funding Congress allocated to New Hampshire's school districts through the three ESSER grants (I, II, and III). Data is made available by Georgetown University's Edunomics Lab.[8] Navigate the page using the following links:

ESSER I

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

New Hampshire ESSER I allocation and expenditures by district
District Name Total ESSER I Allocation
Academy for Science and Design Charter School $5,761
Albany $257
Allenstown $152,222
Alton $56,367
Amherst $22,623
Andover $30,246
Arts Academy of New Hampshire Chartered Public School (prev. Granite State Arts Academy) $10,927
Ashland $62,772
Auburn $24,047
Barnstead $110,516
Barrington $66,280
Bartlett $36,793
Bath $20,535
Bedford $95,269
Berlin $634,941
Bethlehem $47,318
Bow $63,224
Brookline $9,143
Campton $68,266
Candia $35,714
Chester $10,652
Chesterfield $26,223
Chichester $19,305
Claremont $763,422
Cocheco Academy for the Arts $17,245
Colebrook $121,628
Compass Classical Academy Charter School $54,862
Concord $953,637
Contoocook Valley $332,039
Conway $507,699
Cornish $22,898
Croydon $462
Deerfield $46,975
Derry Cooperative $699,562
Dover $650,543
Dresden $36,036
Dunbarton $14,479
Epping School District SAU#14 $132,341
Epsom $59,642
Errol $100
Exeter $106,747
Exeter Region Cooperative $87,611
Fall Mountain Regional $362,738
Farmington $362,869
Franklin $539,151
Freedom $30,924
Fremont $31,692
Gate City Charter School for the Arts $31,496
Gilford $126,745
Gilmanton $33,140
Goffstown $276,550
Gorham Randolph Shelburne Cooperative $80,306
Goshen $261
Governor Wentworth Regional $539,307
Grantham $14,479
Great Bay Charter School $21,705
Greenland $17,535
Hale's Location (Carroll County) $0
Hampstead $50,032
Hampton $88,642
Hampton Falls $9,331
Hanover $5,939
Harrisville $7,401
Haverhill Cooperative School District $170,788
Henniker $58,109
Hill $12,590
Hillsboro-Deering Cooperative $350,820
Hinsdale $188,679
Holderness $18,256
Hollis $7,918
Hollis-Brookline Cooperative $20,078
Hooksett $145,578
Hopkinton $46,010
Hudson $454,775
Inter-Lakes Cooperative $156,594
Jackson $9,807
Jaffrey-Rindge Cooperative $274,976
John Stark Regional $59,684
Kearsarge Regional $171,636
Keene School District $518,593
Kensington $0
Kreiva Academy Public Charter School District $16,541
Laconia $982,087
Lafayette Regional $14,976
Landaff $270
LEAF Charter School $0
Lebanon $230,377
Ledyard Charter School $24,491
Lempster $26,283
Lincoln-Woodstock Cooperative $69,863
Lisbon Regional $159,878
Litchfield $63,224
Littleton $265,218
Londonderry $168,606
Lyme $8,044
Madison $58,115
Making Community Connections Charter School $72,183
Manchester $6,697,801
Marlborough $59,230
Marlow $9,769
Mascenic Regional $197,600
Mascoma Valley Regional $256,841
Mason $13,835
Merrimack School District $392,007
Merrimack Valley $373,877
MicroSociety Academy Charter School Foundation $16,388
Middleton $52,537
Milan $39,647
Milford $235,565
Mill Falls Charter School $15,330
Milton $130,166
Monadnock Regional $423,834
Monroe School District $11,765
Mont Vernon School District $10,135
Moultonborough $96,419
Mountain Village Charter School $9,287
Nashua $3,274,148
Nelson $20,554
New Boston $29,923
Newfound Area $305,775
Newmarket $108,728
Newport $470,625
Next Charter School $14,000
North Country Charter Academy $36,556
North Hampton $14,230
Northeast Woodland Chartered Public School $0
Northumberland $141,938
Northwood $58,899
Nottingham $23,970
Oyster River Coop $39,496
PACE Career Academy $31,195
Pelham $119,868
Pembroke $174,773
Pemi-Baker Regional $193,465
Piermont $541
Pittsburg $28,962
Pittsfield $264,449
Plainfield $12,226
Plymouth $121,197
Polaris Charter School $12,138
Portsmouth $286,291
Profile $36,147
Prospect Mountain JMA $51,190
Raymond $212,343
Rivendell $25,878
Robert Frost Charter School $17,765
Rochester $1,104,894
Rollinsford $13,353
Rumney $58,593
Rye $14,640
Salem $415,583
Sanborn Regional $117,292
Seabrook $205,856
Seacoast Charter School $14,744
Shaker Regional $283,691
Somersworth $549,980
Souhegan Cooperative School District $14,516
Spark Academy of Advanced Technologies $8,860
Stark $424
Stewartstown $80,604
Stoddard $17,277
Strafford $31,371
Stratford $57,738
Stratham $7,305
Strong Foundations Charter School $32,879
Sunapee $34,264
Surry Village Charter School $10,217
Tamworth School District $88,449
The Birches Academy of Academics & Art $7,103
The Founders Academy Charter School $17,482
Thornton $51,097
Timberlane Regional $124,010
Unity $31,862
Virtual Learning Academy Charter School $16,935
Wakefield $147,356
Warren $27,348
Washington $15,201
Weare $91,216
Wentworth $31,205
Westmoreland $13,275
White Mountains Regional $386,947
Wilton-Lyndeborough Cooperative $69,774
Winchester $312,335
Windham $29,316
Windham Academy Public Charter School $0
Winnacunnet Cooperative $144,719
Winnisquam Regional $349,793


ESSER II

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

New Hampshire ESSER II allocation and expenditures by district
District Name Total ESSER II Allocation
Academy for Science and Design Charter School
Albany $2,191
Allenstown $795,990
Alton $302,177
Amherst $93,829
Andover $186,727
Arts Academy of New Hampshire Chartered Public School (prev. Granite State Arts Academy) $58,258
Ashland $271,091
Auburn $52,961
Barnstead $431,563
Barrington $290,870
Bartlett $129,372
Bath $60,198
Bedford $328,945
Berlin $2,066,352
Bethlehem $204,996
Bow $257,101
Brookline $34,195
Campton $256,610
Candia $125,865
Chester $87,491
Chesterfield $127,399
Chichester $98,236
Claremont $2,879,321
Cocheco Academy for the Arts $50,643
Colebrook $613,821
Compass Classical Academy Charter School $286,289
Concord $4,300,924
Contoocook Valley $1,452,165
Conway $1,980,323
Cornish $75,812
Croydon $46,698
Deerfield $180,355
Derry Cooperative $3,541,714
Dover $2,772,636
Dresden $75,480
Dunbarton $55,258
Epping School District SAU#14 $366,082
Epsom $171,913
Errol $689
Exeter $316,196
Exeter Region Cooperative $313,993
Fall Mountain Regional $1,965,477
Farmington $1,730,683
Franklin $2,663,301
Freedom $55,922
Fremont $144,284
Gate City Charter School for the Arts $159,941
Gilford $554,483
Gilmanton $179,587
Goffstown $1,128,057
Gorham Randolph Shelburne Cooperative $229,737
Goshen $1,377
Governor Wentworth Regional $2,928,158
Grantham $67,537
Great Bay Charter School $124,386
Greenland $86,724
Hale's Location (Carroll County) $125
Hampstead $188,797
Hampton $384,501
Hampton Falls
Hanover $20,851
Harrisville $31,466
Haverhill Cooperative School District $855,894
Henniker $211,575
Hill $54,641
Hillsboro-Deering Cooperative $1,399,482
Hinsdale $858,280
Holderness $62,165
Hollis $30,859
Hollis-Brookline Cooperative $60,050
Hooksett $685,633
Hopkinton $170,378
Hudson $1,816,123
Inter-Lakes Cooperative $821,629
Jackson
Jaffrey-Rindge Cooperative $1,082,427
John Stark Regional $221,031
Kearsarge Regional $676,503
Keene School District $2,499,821
Kensington $37,606
Kreiva Academy Public Charter School District $81,965
Laconia $3,928,548
Lafayette Regional $85,395
Landaff
LEAF Charter School $56,213
Lebanon $1,070,688
Ledyard Charter School $109,369
Lempster $104,744
Lincoln-Woodstock Cooperative $232,938
Lisbon Regional $768,463
Litchfield $333,081
Littleton $1,524,083
Londonderry $696,610
Lyme $68,305
Madison $193,828
Making Community Connections Charter School $290,966
Manchester $26,018,268
Marlborough $240,891
Marlow $47,132
Mascenic Regional $820,140
Mascoma Valley Regional $917,888
Mason
Merrimack School District $633,430
Merrimack Valley $1,504,992
MicroSociety Academy Charter School Foundation $71,175
Middleton $245,540
Milan $140,391
Milford $997,737
Mill Falls Charter School $71,175
Milton $489,193
Monadnock Regional $1,764,123
Monroe School District $52,550
Mont Vernon School District $43,746
Moultonborough $249,991
Mountain Village Charter School $50,085
Nashua $12,973,377
Nelson $92,952
New Boston $141,981
Newfound Area $1,512,591
Newmarket $658,656
Newport $1,876,231
Next Charter School $72,944
North Country Charter Academy $180,850
North Hampton $25,438
Northeast Woodland Chartered Public School $75,462
Northumberland $643,021
Northwood $163,470
Nottingham $143,516
Oyster River Coop $134,573
PACE Career Academy
Pelham $350,732
Pembroke $791,561
Pemi-Baker Regional $747,805
Piermont
Pittsburg $128,454
Pittsfield $1,049,222
Plainfield $44,513
Plymouth $548,417
Polaris Charter School $73,745
Portsmouth $1,230,284
Profile $183,198
Prospect Mountain JMA $188,797
Raymond $800,182
Rivendell $39,141
Robert Frost Charter School $113,652
Rochester $4,920,009
Rollinsford $69,839
Rumney $109,963
Rye $37,114
Salem $1,751,671
Sanborn Regional $442,061
Seabrook $918,274
Seacoast Charter School $76,447
Shaker Regional $977,239
Somersworth $2,268,676
Souhegan Cooperative School District $54,629
Spark Academy of Advanced Technologies
Stark $1,940
Stewartstown $154,471
Stoddard $31,466
Strafford $145,819
Stratford $230,957
Stratham $26,272
Strong Foundations Charter School $152,885
Sunapee $184,192
Surry Village Charter School $74,624
Tamworth School District $364,310
The Birches Academy of Academics & Art $34,267
The Founders Academy Charter School $137,085
Thornton $197,834
Timberlane Regional $544,111
Unity $153,191
Virtual Learning Academy Charter School $113,355
Wakefield $729,656
Warren $136,921
Washington $57,789
Weare $353,035
Wentworth $89,806
Westmoreland $73,603
White Mountains Regional $2,219,847
Wilton-Lyndeborough Cooperative $304,267
Winchester $986,259
Windham $107,173
Windham Academy Public Charter School $31,635
Winnacunnet Cooperative $581,218
Winnisquam Regional $1,681,144

ESSER III

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

New Hampshire ESSER III allocation and expenditures by district
District Name Total ESSER III Allocation
Academy for Science and Design Charter School
Albany $4,925
Allenstown $1,789,430
Alton $679,311
Amherst $210,932
Andover $419,773
Arts Academy of New Hampshire Chartered Public School (prev. Granite State Arts Academy) $130,968
Ashland $609,428
Auburn $119,059
Barnstead $970,178
Barrington $653,892
Bartlett $290,835
Bath $135,329
Bedford $739,488
Berlin $4,645,275
Bethlehem $460,844
Bow $577,979
Brookline $76,873
Campton $576,873
Candia $282,951
Chester $196,685
Chesterfield $286,401
Chichester $220,840
Claremont $6,472,877
Cocheco Academy for the Arts $113,848
Colebrook $1,379,904
Compass Classical Academy Charter School $643,594
Concord $9,668,720
Contoocook Valley $3,264,549
Conway $4,451,879
Cornish $170,429
Croydon $104,980
Deerfield $405,448
Derry Cooperative $7,961,973
Dover $6,233,043
Dresden $169,683
Dunbarton $124,222
Epping School District SAU#14 $822,972
Epsom $386,469
Errol $1,548
Exeter $710,827
Exeter Region Cooperative $705,874
Fall Mountain Regional $4,418,503
Farmington $3,890,673
Franklin $5,987,252
Freedom $0
Fremont $324,358
Gate City Charter School for the Arts $359,556
Gilford $1,246,510
Gilmanton $403,722
Goffstown $2,535,936
Gorham Randolph Shelburne Cooperative $516,462
Goshen $3,096
Governor Wentworth Regional $6,582,666
Grantham $151,827
Great Bay Charter School $279,628
Greenland $194,960
Hale's Location (Carroll County) $281
Hampstead $424,427
Hampton $864,380
Hampton Falls
Hanover $46,874
Harrisville $70,738
Haverhill Cooperative School District $1,924,097
Henniker $475,632
Hill $122,836
Hillsboro-Deering Cooperative $3,146,114
Hinsdale $1,929,462
Holderness $139,750
Hollis $69,373
Hollis-Brookline Cooperative $134,996
Hooksett $1,541,342
Hopkinton $383,019
Hudson $4,082,747
Inter-Lakes Cooperative $1,847,069
Jackson
Jaffrey-Rindge Cooperative $2,433,357
John Stark Regional $496,890
Kearsarge Regional $1,520,817
Keene School District $5,619,738
Kensington $84,540
Kreiva Academy Public Charter School District $184,262
Laconia $8,831,599
Lafayette Regional $191,973
Landaff
LEAF Charter School $126,370
Lebanon $2,406,968
Ledyard Charter School $245,867
Lempster $235,470
Lincoln-Woodstock Cooperative $523,657
Lisbon Regional $1,727,547
Litchfield $748,784
Littleton $3,426,226
Londonderry $1,566,020
Lyme $153,553
Madison $435,737
Making Community Connections Charter School $654,108
Manchester $58,490,541
Marlborough $541,537
Marlow $105,956
Mascenic Regional $1,843,721
Mascoma Valley Regional $2,063,464
Mason
Merrimack School District $1,423,986
Merrimack Valley $3,383,307
MicroSociety Academy Charter School Foundation $160,005
Middleton $551,987
Milan $315,606
Milford $2,242,970
Mill Falls Charter School $160,005
Milton $1,099,734
Monadnock Regional $3,965,848
Monroe School District $118,135
Mont Vernon School District $98,343
Moultonborough $561,993
Mountain Village Charter School $112,594
Nashua $29,164,886
Nelson $208,962
New Boston $319,182
Newfound Area $3,400,391
Newmarket $1,480,696
Newport $4,217,875
Next Charter School $163,982
North Country Charter Academy $406,561
North Hampton $57,186
Northeast Woodland Chartered Public School $169,643
Northumberland $1,445,548
Northwood $367,491
Nottingham $322,633
Oyster River Coop $302,528
PACE Career Academy
Pelham $788,466
Pembroke $1,779,473
Pemi-Baker Regional $1,681,107
Piermont
Pittsburg $288,773
Pittsfield $2,358,710
Plainfield $100,068
Plymouth $1,232,873
Polaris Charter School $165,784
Portsmouth $2,765,748
Profile $411,840
Prospect Mountain JMA $424,426
Raymond $1,798,854
Rivendell $87,991
Robert Frost Charter School $255,496
Rochester $11,060,460
Rollinsford $157,003
Rumney $247,202
Rye $83,435
Salem $3,937,855
Sanborn Regional $993,778
Seabrook $2,064,332
Seacoast Charter School $171,858
Shaker Regional $2,196,888
Somersworth $5,100,111
Souhegan Cooperative School District $122,809
Spark Academy of Advanced Technologies
Stark $4,362
Stewartstown $347,260
Stoddard $70,738
Strafford $327,809
Stratford $519,204
Stratham $59,061
Strong Foundations Charter School $343,694
Sunapee $414,074
Surry Village Charter School $167,760
Tamworth School District $818,989
The Birches Academy of Academics & Art $77,035
The Founders Academy Charter School $308,175
Thornton $444,742
Timberlane Regional $1,223,191
Unity $344,382
Virtual Learning Academy Charter School $254,828
Wakefield $1,640,308
Warren $307,807
Washington $129,913
Weare $793,642
Wentworth $201,889
Westmoreland $165,463
White Mountains Regional $4,990,341
Wilton-Lyndeborough Cooperative $684,010
Winchester $2,217,167
Windham $240,931
Windham Academy Public Charter School $71,117
Winnacunnet Cooperative $1,306,612
Winnisquam Regional $3,779,307

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.[9]

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

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.[11] Districts were required to have spent the funds by the end of January 2025 (though they could request an extension from the federal government).[12]

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.”[13]

Districts, already facing declining public school enrollment, grappled with the loss of billions of dollars in federal aid as ESSER funds expired.[14] 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.[15]

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.[16] 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.[17]

Some districts announced staff and teacher layoffs due to losing ESSER funds.[18][19][20] Districts also cut expenses in other ways, including ending after-school programs, tutoring services, and more.[21][22]

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See also

Footnotes

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