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Provided Education Support for Displaced Students' which was released 
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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to the Congressional Requesters: 

September 2011: 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: 

Temporary Emergency Impact Aid Provided Education Support for 
Displaced Students: 

GAO-11-839: 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Briefing to Congressional Requesters, August 4, 2011: 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

September 7, 2011: 

The Honorable Tom Harkin: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Michael B. Enzi: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Mary Landrieu: 
Chairman: 
Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Lamar Alexander: 
United States Senate: 

In August and September 2005, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita devastated 
large portions of the U.S. Gulf Coast, resulting in nearly 2,000 
deaths and severe damage to 305,000 houses and apartments. Thousands 
of families relocated to communities throughout the United States and 
enrolled their children in local public or private schools. Some 
families who remained in the devastated areas enrolled their children 
in schools other than their home schools because their home schools 
had been seriously damaged or destroyed. Congress appropriated $880 
million for the Temporary Emergency Impact Aid for Displaced Students 
(Emergency Impact Aid) program to assist local educational agencies 
(school districts) and private schools with the costs of educating 
these displaced students.[Footnote 1] Funds were for costs incurred 
during the 2005-2006 school year, and could be used for a variety of 
purposes, including compensating teachers, purchasing curriculum 
materials, leasing portable classrooms, providing counseling services, 
and covering reasonable transportation costs. 

The U.S. Department of Education (Education) awarded Emergency Impact 
Aid funds to 49 states and the District of Columbia based on the count 
of displaced students enrolled on quarterly dates selected by each 
state, as reported by public and participating private schools. 
[Footnote 2] Each quarter, on the basis of these counts, states 
received $1,500 per displaced student without disabilities and $1,875 
per displaced student with disabilities. States could keep up to 1 
percent of funds for administrative expenses, and were required to 
disburse the remaining funds to local school districts. Districts were 
allowed to spend up to 2 percent of funds for administration and, 
similar to states, were required to disburse the remaining funds to 
public and participating private schools within their jurisdictions. 
Education did not require states or districts to report how funds were 
used, but directed districts to maintain records of expenditures. 
[Footnote 3] While the program we reviewed has expired, legislation 
was introduced in Congress in 2011 that includes provisions that would 
require Education to provide emergency impact aid in certain 
circumstances involving presidentially declared disasters, and would 
give Education discretion to provide such aid in other circumstances 
if a state is experiencing a catastrophic incident[Footnote 4].: 

On the basis of your request, we answered the following questions: (1) 
What is known about how many students were served by the Emergency 
Impact Aid program in key states? (2) What challenges, if any, did 
districts and private schools face in accessing the program or 
obtaining the required student verification? (3) How did states, 
districts, and private schools report using the funds and what is 
known about whether the funds covered the costs of serving displaced 
students?, and (4) How did Education support states in implementing 
the program? 

To evaluate implementation of the Emergency Impact Aid program, we 
selected 4 states for our review--Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and 
Texas--which received 80 percent of total Emergency Impact Aid 
funding. Within these states, we selected a total of 13 school 
districts for further review, 12 of which received among the highest 
amounts of funding in their respective states, as well as 1 district 
that returned a large amount of funding originally awarded to it. 
Within areas served by these districts, we selected for further review 
a total of seven private schools and private school umbrella 
organizations. Five private schools were randomly selected, and two 
Louisiana organizations representing multiple Catholic schools were 
selected because of the large number of Catholic schools in the area. 
[Footnote 5] In each selected state, district, and private school, we 
interviewed cognizant officials about their experience with the 
program.[Footnote 6] We also analyzed student count data provided by 
states and expenditure data provided by districts. The findings from 
our selected states, districts, and private schools are not 
generalizable nationwide, but provide illustrative examples and 
valuable perspectives on the Emergency Impact Aid program's operation 
and challenges. To assess Education's role in implementing the 
Emergency Impact Aid program, we interviewed officials and reviewed 
key documentation, including state applications and records of grant 
awards. We also analyzed relevant federal laws, regulations, and 
guidance related to the program and reviewed Education Office of 
Inspector General (OIG) audits and fiscal year 2006 single audits for 
all selected states and 12 out of 13 selected districts.[Footnote 7] 

We also took a number of steps to assess the reliability of various 
data sources we used. First, to assess the reliability of program data 
on the number of students served quarterly, we interviewed Education 
and state officials about the steps they took to ensure data 
reliability and reviewed relevant documentation, including state- 
reported data, for our 4 selected states. We determined these data to 
be sufficiently reliable for our purpose of describing when and where 
displaced students were served. However, we did not verify the 
accuracy of student count data reported by districts to states, and 
some students may be included in more than one state count per quarter 
because of differences in state-selected count dates and student 
mobility.[Footnote 8] We also assessed whether Education data on 
authorized grant award and deobligation amounts were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of reporting what percentage of awards 
grantees returned to Education by comparing Education and state data 
and interviewing Education officials about processes for processing 
returned grant funds. Education officials described limitations in its 
grants management system that resulted in some returned grant funds 
not being originally credited back to states' Emergency Impact Aid 
awards.[Footnote 9] We provided information to Education officials on 
inconsistencies between Education's data and data from our four 
selected states, and Education resolved these differences.[Footnote 
10] Education provided us with updated deobligation data for our 4 
selected states, and we ultimately determined that data for these 
states were sufficiently reliable for our purposes. Finally, we 
assessed the reliability of expenditure data reported to us by our 
selected districts by reviewing submissions for reasonableness and 
following up with district officials to resolve inconsistencies. We 
determined these data to be sufficiently reliable for the purposes of 
describing how selected districts used funds. 

We conducted this performance audit from November 2010 to September 
2011 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings based on our audit objectives. We believe that 
the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

On August 4, 2011, we briefed congressional staff on the results of 
this study, and this report formally conveys the information provided 
during this briefing. (See app. I for the briefing slides.) 
Specifically, we found that states reported to Education the number of 
displaced students served quarterly, as required, but the total number 
of students served is unknown. Displaced student enrollment was at its 
highest at about 152,000 in the first quarter, and reached a low of 
132,000 in the fourth quarter. The large majority of these students 
remained in Gulf Coast states hit by the hurricanes. However, because 
students served in more than one quarter were counted more than once, 
quarterly counts cannot be used to determine the total number of 
students served throughout the 2005-2006 school year. 

Additionally, officials from selected districts and private schools 
reported few challenges accessing the program, but they found 
verifying student eligibility difficult. In particular, some displaced 
students and their families lacked documentation that showed they were 
from hurricane-affected areas, such as a driver's license or utility 
bill. Officials also stated that other student information was 
difficult to obtain, such as immunization records and documentation of 
special education needs. 

We also found that district and private school officials reported 
using Emergency Impact Aid primarily to defray instructional costs and 
tuition, but most did not believe funds covered all costs of serving 
displaced students. Expenditures cited by district officials generally 
related to hiring new staff or supporting existing staff, while other 
expenditures included paying for modular classrooms and buses. 
Officials from 9 out of 13 selected districts did not believe that 
Emergency Impact Aid funds covered all of their costs, and some noted 
that they were unable to claim funding for some displaced students, 
such as those who had left the district prior to the district's first 
quarterly enrollment count. However, we were unable to assess whether 
funds covered costs because districts were not required to track costs 
associated with serving displaced students. Further, districts 
returned funds to Education for a variety of reasons, including 
revisions in quarterly student counts indicating that districts served 
fewer students than originally reported. Some districts also did not 
spend all the funds allocated to them because of confusion about 
program requirements or concern about potential audit findings. 

Last, we found that Education implemented the program quickly and 
provided timely technical assistance to states. While some districts 
and private schools may not have used all funds available to them, the 
Emergency Impact Aid program was designed to support a broad range of 
services to meet the needs of displaced students, and Education worked 
quickly to help states serve a highly mobile student population in a 
challenging environment. Officials from selected states and districts 
were generally pleased with the quality of support provided by 
Education. 

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft copy of this report to Education for its review 
and comment. Education provided us with technical comments and updated 
data which we incorporated as appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to relevant congressional 
committees, the Secretary of Education, and other interested parties. 
In addition, this report will be available at no charge on GAO's 
website at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-7215 or scottg@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff that made key contributions to 
this report are listed in appendix II. 

Signed by: 

George A. Scott: 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Briefing to Congressional Requesters, August 4, 2011: 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: Temporary Emergency Impact Aid Provided 
Education Support for Displaced Students: 

Briefing to Congressional Requesters: 

August 4, 2011: 

This Briefing Is A Work Of GAO Based On Preliminary Information And Is
Subject To Revision: It Should Not Be Reproduced Or Distributed. 

Overview: 

* Introduction; 
* Key Questions; 
* Scope and Methodology; 
* Background; 
* Summary of Findings; 
* Findings. 

[End of section] 

Introduction: 

Temporary Emergency Impact Aid for Displaced Students (Emergency 
Impact Aid) Program: 

In December 2005, Congress authorized Emergency Impact Aid to support 
students in kindergarten through grade 12 (K-12) displaced from their 
schools by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Congress appropriated $880 
million for that purpose.[Footnote 11] 

States distributed funds to local educational agencies (school 
districts) based on the number of displaced students served in public 
and participating private schools in areas served by the district. 
(see figure 1) 

A bill was introduced in Congress in 2011 that would: 

* require the Department of Education (Education) to provide emergency 
impact aid in certain circumstances involving presidentially declared 
disasters, and, 

* give Education discretion to provide such aid in other circumstances 
if a state is experiencing a catastrophic incident.[Footnote 12] 

Figure 1: Emergency Impact Aid Program: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Congress:    
$880 million appropriated for services to K-12 students displaced from 
their schools by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. 

Department of Education:    
Grants awarded to participating states for the 2005-2006 school year. 

Grant rates:   
$1,500 per quarter per student without disabilities; 
$1,875 per quarter per student with disabilities. 

Forty-nine states (all except Hawaii) and the District of Columbia 
participated in the program.    

State educational agency (state): 
States distributed funds to local school districts based on the number 
of displaced students enrolled in public schools and participating 
private schools in areas served by the district.  

School district: 
School districts distributed a portion of the funding to participating 
private schools in areas served by the district based on the number of 
displaced students they served. 
   
Source: GAO analysis of program information. 

[End of figure] 

[End of section] 

Key Questions: 

1. What is known about how many students were served by the Emergency 
Impact Aid program in key states? 

2. What challenges, if any, did districts and private schools face in 
accessing the program or obtaining the required student verification? 

3. How did states, districts, and private schools report using the 
funds and what is known about whether the funds covered the costs of 
serving displaced students? 

4. How did Education support states in implementing the program? 

[End of section] 

Scope and Methodology: 

We reviewed activities in the 4 states (Georgia, Louisiana, 
Mississippi, and Texas) that received 80 percent of program funds. 

* We conducted site Visits to Louisiana and Texas and interviewed 
officials from Georgia and Mississippi by telephone. 

We selected a total of 13 districts within these states for further 
review: 

* Twelve districts were selected because they received among the 
highest amounts of program funds in their states. 

* One district was selected because it returned a relatively high 
percentage of allocated funds. 

Within areas served by selected districts, we selected a total of 
seven participating private schools and private school umbrella 
organizations for further review: 

* Five private schools were randomly selected. 

* Two Louisiana organizations representing multiple Catholic schools 
were selected due to the large number of Catholic schools in the area. 

In each selected state, district, and private school, we interviewed 
cognizant officials.  

We also analyzed enrollment data in all 50 states and expenditure data 
in the selected states for the 2005-2006 school year.  

For each state and 12 of the 13 districts we reviewed fiscal year 2006 
single audits.[Footnote 13] 

Table: 

State: Texas; 
School districts contacted: 5; 
Private schools contacted: 1. 

State: Louisiana; 
School districts contacted: 4; 
Private schools contacted: 3[A]. 

State: Georgia; 
School districts contacted: 2; 
Private schools contacted: 2. 

State: Mississippi; 
School districts contacted: 2; 
Private schools contacted: 1. 

State: Total; 
School districts contacted: 13; 
Private schools contacted: 7. 

[A] We counted two Louisiana organizations representing multiple 
Catholic schools as private schools. 

[End of table] 

We conducted other interviews with Education officials. 

We reviewed relevant federal laws, regulations, and guidance. 

We reviewed Education data and documentation, including the following: 

* quarterly counts of displaced students served by the program, 

* state applications for program funding and records of grant awards, 
and, 

* Education's Office of Inspector General (01G) reviews of early
program implementation in 5 states—-Alabama, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. 

We assessed the reliability of quarterly student counts by 
interviewing state and federal officials and reviewing relevant 
documentation, including state-reported data, for our 4 selected 
states. 

We determined these data to be sufficiently reliable for describing 
when and where students were served. 

* However, we did not verify the accuracy of student count data. 
[Footnote 14] 

* Some students may be included in more than one state's quarterly 
count due to differences in state-selected count dates and student 
mobility. 

We also assessed whether Education data on authorized grant award and 
deobligation amounts were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of 
reporting what percentage of awards grantees returned to Education by: 

* comparing Education and state data, and, 

* interviewing Education officials about processes for recording 
returned grant funds. 

Education officials described limitations in its grants management 
system that resulted in some returned grant funds not being credited 
back to states' Emergency Impact Aid awards.[Footnote 15] 

* We provided information to Education officials on inconsistencies 
between Education's data and data from our 4 selected states, and 
Education resolved these differences.[Footnote 16] 

Education provided us with updated deobligation data for our 4 
selected states and we ultimately determined that data for these 
states were sufficiently reliable for our purposes. 

We also assessed the reliability of expenditure data reported to us by 
our selected districts by reviewing submissions for reasonableness and 
following up with district officials to resolve inconsistencies. 

We determined these data to be sufficiently reliable for the purposes 
of describing how selected districts used funds. 

We conducted this performance audit from November 2010 to September 
2011 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings based on our audit objectives. We believe that 
the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Background: 

Emergency Impact Aid Implementation Timeline: 

Aug. 25, 2005: 
Hurricane Katrina makes landfall. (See figure 2)  

Sept. 24, 2005:    
Hurricane Rita makes landfall. 

Dec. 30, 2005: 
Emergency Impact Aid authorized by Congress. 

January 2006: 
Education makes funding applications available to states. 

February 2006: 
State funding applications due. 

March 2006: 
States begin to receive funds. 

Figure 2: Paths of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated map of the Southeastern U.S.] 

Map depicts the approximate paths of hurricanes. 

Source: GAO analysis based on National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration graphics. 

[End of figure] 

Effects of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: 

Federal disaster areas were declared: 

* throughout Louisiana and Texas and, 

* in parts of Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi. 

Catastrophic impact in lives lost and property damage: 

* nearly 2,000 deaths; 

* more than 305,000 homes and apartments were severely damaged by
Hurricane Katrina. 

Significant effects on schools: 

* many Louisiana and Mississippi schools damaged; 

* almost all schools in the Orleans Parish school district closed for 
the entire 2005-2006 school year. 

Significant effects on students: 

* thousands of children and youth left homeless; 

* increased incidence of depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic 
stress disorder symptoms has been reported in studies of the effects 
of the hurricanes and other natural disasters on students' mental 
health and behavior. 

Emergency Impact Aid Supported Public and Private Schools That Served 
Students Displaced by Hurricanes: 

Participating districts and private schools received funds based on 
the number of displaced students they served on a specific date each 
quarter. 

* States had discretion to choose quarterly count dates used. 

* Education specified the dates these counts were required to be 
reported. 

Displaced students were those: 

* from a federally declared disaster area and, 

* enrolled in a school other than their home schoo1.[Footnote 17] 

Once displaced students returned to their home school, districts were 
no longer eligible to obtain funding for those students. 

Funding was for expenses incurred during the 2005-2006 school year, 
and districts had to obligate funds by September 30, 2006. 

Emergency Impact Aid Funds Were Available for a Variety of Purposes: 

Funds could be used for: 

* personnel compensation, 
* curricular material and supplies, 
* mobile educational units, 
* leasing space, 
* reasonable transportation costs, 
* health and counseling services, 
* education and support services, and, 
* basic instructional services, including tutoring. 

Program did not require that funds be used solely to serve displaced 
students. 

* For example funds used to support classroom instruction for 
displaced students could benefit regular students as well. 

States could retain 1 percent and districts 2 percent of funds for 
administrative costs. 

States, districts, and private schools were not required to report to 
Education how funds were spent; however, at a minimum, they were 
required to maintain documentation of: 

* funds received and allowable expenditures and, 

* auditable enrollment records of displaced students served. 

[End of section] 

Summary of Findings: 

States reported to Education the number of displaced students served 
quarterly, as required, but the total number of students served is 
unknown. 

Selected districts and private schools had few challenges accessing 
the program, but officials found verifying student eligibility 
difficult. 

District and private school officials reported using Emergency Impact 
Aid primarily to defray instructional costs and tuition, but most did 
not believe funds covered all costs. 

Education implemented the program quickly and provided timely 
technical assistance to states. 

Objective 1: Quarterly Counts Captured the Number of Displaced 
Students Served at Points in Time: 

Districts were required to report the number of displaced students 
enrolled in public and participating private schools on a specific 
date each quarter during the 2005-2006 school year. 

According to national data from Education: 

* enrollment was highest in the first quarter with 152,000 students 
served,[Footnote 18] and, 

* enrollment dropped to its lowest point in the fourth quarter with 
132,000 students served. 

Enrollment may have declined throughout the school year as displaced 
students re-enrolled in their home schools. 

* According to officials in selected districts and private schools, 
many displaced students began returning home in winter 2005.[Footnote 
19] 

Objective 1: Quarterly Counts Do Not Indicate the Total Number of
Students Served throughout the School Year: 

Quarterly counts cannot be used to calculate an estimate of the total 
number of displaced students served because students were counted for 
each quarter they were served, resulting in a duplicated count. 

* For example, if a student was served during all four quarters, he or 
she would have been counted four times. 

States could not track students who relocated across state lines due 
to limitations in state student information systems. 

* Some displaced students were counted in more than 1 state. 

Quarterly counts enabled districts to claim compensation for displaced 
students served for part of the school year, as many students moved 
often and were served in multiple districts or states. 

Objective 1: Most Students Were Served in States Hardest Hit by 
Hurricanes: 

Most displaced students remained in states near the Gulf Coast (see 
figure 3).  

Seventy-eight percent of students were served in quarter 1 in states 
with federally declared disaster areas (Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, 
Mississippi, and Texas).  

An additional 7 percent were served in Georgia. 

Figure 3: Displaced Students Served in First Quarter of 2005-2006 
School Year, by State: 

Number of displaced students: less than 100: 
Alaska: 
Connecticut: 
Delaware: 
District of Columbia: 
Hawaii: 
Idaho: 
Maine: 
Montana: 
New Hampshire: 
North Dakota: 
Oregon: 
Rhode Island: 
South Dakota: 
Vermont: 
West Virginia: 
Wyoming: 

Number of displaced students: 100-400: 
Iowa: 
Kansas: 
Massachusetts: 
Minnesota: 
Nebraska: 
Nevada: 
New Jersey: 
New Mexico: 
New York: 
Pennsylvania: 
Utah: 
Washington: 
Wisconsin: 

Number of displaced students: 400-1,000: 
Arizona: 
California: 
Colorado: 
Illinois: 
Indiana: 
Kentucky: 
Maryland: 
Michigan: 
Ohio: 
South Carolina: 

Number of displaced students: 1,000-10,000: 
Arkansas: 
Florida: 6,288; 
Missouri: 
North Carolina: 
Oklahoma: 
Tennessee: 
Virginia: 

Number of displaced students: 10,000 or more: 
Alabama: 7,306; 
Georgia: 10,244; 
Louisiana: 44,913; 
Mississippi: 14,720; 
Texas: 45,080; 
    
Sources: GAO analysis of Education data; GAO (map). 

[End of figure] 

Objective 1: All Selected States and Most Districts Conducted
Outreach to Enroll Displaced Students: 

Although not required to do so, officials from all selected states and 
most districts said they conducted outreach to displaced students and 
their families through one or more of the following: 

* Newspapers, 
* Billboards, 
* TV and radio announcements,
* Hurricane-related websites, or, 
* Toll-free call centers. 

Officials from 3 of 5 selected Texas districts, which collectively 
served nearly 9,000 displaced students in the first quarter, said they 
enrolled students on-site at shelters and evacuation centers. 

Officials we interviewed from 2 of the 13 selected districts said the 
environment was too chaotic to conduct outreach. 

* For example, in one Louisiana district that received 10,000 
applications from displaced students, officials said minimal outreach 
was necessary because students arrived at school doors. 

Objective 1: Private Schools Also Served Displaced Students, But
Enrollment Declined over Time: 

Private schools served 12 percent of all displaced students in the 
first quarter of the 2005-2006 school year, according to Education 
data. 

* Private school officials said that displaced students originally 
enrolled in private schools were generally served by private schools 
in other districts and states. 

Displaced student enrollment declined by 50 percent among private 
schools over the course of the year, compared with a 8 percent decline 
in public schools. 

Displaced student enrollment in private schools may have declined more 
quickly than in public schools because private schools reopened sooner 
than other schools in some affected areas, allowing students to re-
enroll in their home schools. 

* For example, officials from the Archdiocese of New Orleans told us 
the majority of its 86 schools reopened by January 2006, whereas only 
5 public schools in New Orleans reopened during the entire school year. 

[End of Objective 1] 

Objective 2: Selected Districts Did Not Face Significant Challenges
Accessing Emergency Impact Aid Funds: 

Most officials from selected districts generally did not report 
difficulties participating in the program or accessing funds. 

However, officials from 2 states said some districts that served 
displaced students chose not to apply for funding in part because of: 

* compressed application timelines, 
* potential administrative burden, or, 
* serving few displaced students. 

While districts had 2 weeks to submit Emergency Impact Aid 
applications, which included student counts, to their states: 

* Education encouraged districts to track displaced students served 
prior to program authorization, and; 

* promptly provided districts with guidance and funding applications 
after authorization of the program. 

Objective 2: Selected Private Schools Generally Had Access to the
Program, but Some Schools Chose Not to Participate: 

Officials from a majority of selected districts and private schools 
reported that private schools were notified about funding. 

In many cases, district officials told us most private schools within 
their boundaries elected to participate in the program. 

However, Education and district officials stated that some private 
schools chose not to participate in part due to: 

* concerns about reporting requirements and potential for audit, 
* general reticence to accept federal funds, 
* increased administrative burden. 

Objective 2: Verifying Student Eligibility Was Challenging for Districts
because Student Records Were Not Easily Obtained: 

District and private school officials told us many displaced students 
lacked documents verifying their previous address, such as a driver's 
license or utility bill. 

* In such cases, some officials said they accepted other types of 
verification, such as report cards, or accepted parental affirmation 
of eligibility. 

Officials from one district also noted frustration over statutory 
verification requirements, as many displaced students were originally 
enrolled as homeless. 

* Under the McKinney-Vento Education for Homeless Children and Youth
Program, districts must enroll homeless students immediately, even if 
they lack normally required documentation.[Footnote 20] 

To help districts address this challenge, Louisiana provided access to 
its student information database in mid-September 2005 to states that 
enrolled a large number of displaced students. 

Objective 2: 
Obtaining Student Information from Hurricane-Affected Districts Was 
Also Challenging: 

Due to damage in displaced students' home districts, officials in 
selected districts said they had difficulty obtaining information such 
as: 

* immunization records, 
* grade-level placement, and, 
* special education needs. 

Officials reported spending significant time and resources obtaining new
immunizations and academic assessments for students without records. 

Officials from 2 Texas districts expressed concern about some 
displaced students' academic preparedness and ability to meet Texas 
academic standards. 

* The Texas Education Agency coordinated with the Louisiana Department 
of Education to provide graduating students with either a Louisiana or 
Texas diploma, depending on which state's graduation requirements were 
met. 

Objective 2: Districts Served Displaced Students with Disabilities, but
Faced Challenges Accessing Their Records: 

Enrollment of displaced students with disabilities peaked in the third 
quarter of the 2005-2006 school year, when 13,102 students with 
disabilities, or 10 percent of all displaced students, were served. 

Officials from 3 selected districts said they faced challenges serving 
students with disabilities because their individualized education 
program records were not immediately available.[Footnote 21] 

One selected district was cited in its fiscal year 2006 single audit 
for not providing special education services for some of the sampled 
displaced students with disabilities for which it had received funding. 

[End of Objective 2] 

Objective 3: Selected Districts Reported Using 88 Percent of 
Emergency Impact Aid Funds for Instruction: 
 
Our analysis of expenditure data reported to us by 9 of our 13 
selected districts indicates that 88 percent of funds was spent on 
instruction and about 12 percent was spent on other costs associated 
with serving displaced students.[Footnote 22] 

Figure 4: Reported Uses of Emergency Impact Aid Funding in 10 Selected 
Districts:  

[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart] 

Instruction/instruction support services: 87.7%; 
Operations and plant maintenance: 5.5%; 
Central services: 3.1%; 
Student support services: 2.4%; 
Student transportation and related services: 1.3%. 

Source: GAO analysis of summary expenditure data provided by selected 
districts.  

[End of figure] 

Objective 3: Districts Provided a Variety of Examples of How They Used 
Funds: 

Officials from selected districts described a range of Emergency 
Impact Aid uses, generally related to funding staff salaries and 
benefits. 

* Four districts specifically reported using funds to hire new staff. 

* Three districts reported that they funded existing staff, but did 
not hire new staff. 

In addition to funding staff salaries, some districts used funds for 
other purposes. 

* An official from a Louisiana district reported using some funds to 
reopen and operate two schools, and to operate 39 modular buildings. 

* Officials from a Texas district reported using some funds to replace 
desks and textbooks that had been washed-away by Hurricane Rita. 

Private schools primarily reported using funds to defray tuition costs. 

Objective 3: Some Selected Districts Hired Counselors, while Others
Did Not: 

Officials from selected districts and private schools indicated that 
many displaced students had counseling needs. 

* These observations are consistent with research showing that 
students affected by Hurricane Katrina faced issues including 
depression and post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms.[Footnote 23] 

Districts took a variety of approaches to meet these needs. 

* Some districts reported hiring additional counselors, while others 
did not. 

* Two districts and two private schools reported referring students to 
outside counseling programs. 

Officials from 3 districts and two private schools affected by the 
hurricanes noted that there were not sufficient counseling resources 
available in the community after the storms to support these students. 

Officials from 2 districts stated that they did not have sufficient 
Emergency Impact Aid funding to cover counseling costs. 

Objective 3: Most District Officials Told Us They Did Not Believe 
Program Funding Covered All Costs, and Some Received Funding from
Other Sources: 

Officials from 9 out of 13 selected districts told us they did not 
believe program funds covered all costs of serving displaced students. 
[Footnote 24] 

* For instance, an official from 1 district noted that the district 
exhausted all of its Emergency Impact Aid funding and expended $1.1 
million in funding from an outside source on displaced students. 

Districts also may not have received reimbursement for all displaced 
students they served, such as those who left prior to the first 
quarterly enrollment count. 

* An official from one district official reported that it enrolled 
6,500 displaced students immediately after Katrina but only claimed 
funding for 5,241 students still enrolled on the first official count 
date. 

However, some officials also noted that funding was available from 
other federal grants, state funds, and private donations. 

Objective 3: Nearly Five Percent of Emergency Impact Aid Funds Were   
Returned to Education: 

Education data indicate that, as of August 2011, participating states 
and districts returned to Education about $41.1 million (4.7 percent) 
of awarded Emergency Impact Aid funds. 

According to these data, selected states returned from 2.9 to 8.2 
percent of funds allocated to them.[Footnote 25] 

Table:
State: Georgia; 
Amount Returned: $1.6 million; 
Percent Returned: 2.9%.  

State: Louisiana; 
Amount Returned: $19.6 million; 
Percent Returned: 6.7%.  

State: Mississippi; 
Amount Returned: $8.2 million; 
Percent Returned: 8.2%.  

State: Texas; 
Amount Returned: $8.5 million; 
Percent Returned: 3.4%.  

Source: GAO analysis of Education deobligation data. 
   
[End of table] 

Objective 3: 
Some Districts Returned Funds Due to Inaccurate Counts of Displaced 
Students: 

Some districts returned a portion of allocated funds because of 
inaccuracies in their original quarterly counts of displaced students. 

Education's OIG conducted program audits in 5 states for the 2005-2006 
school year, and recommended that Education require states and 
districts to provide supporting documentation or repay nearly $33 
million in questionable costs related to potential inaccuracies in 
student counts. 

* Education officials told us that they plan to make final 
determinations about whether states will have to return these funds by 
September 30, 2011. 

Four selected districts were also cited in their fiscal year 2006 
single audits for student count inaccuracies: 

* Three districts inadequately documented some students' eligibility. 

* Two districts included ineligible students in their enrollment 
counts. 

* One district included ineligible prekindergarten students in its 
counts.[Footnote 26] 

Objective 3: Other Districts Returned Unused Funds for Various Reasons: 

State officials in Texas and Mississippi told us that some districts 
chose not to use a portion of allocated funds in case they were 
required to return funds later. 

* Officials suggested that such concerns may have been heightened 
because of ongoing OIG audits in their states. 

Officials from 2 selected districts also stated that they spent funds 
cautiously because they were uncertain about what expenditures were 
allowable or what documentation was required. 

* One district in Texas did not spend the majority of its funding 
allocation because of these concerns. 

All unused funds were required to be returned to Education after the
September 30, 2006, obligation deadline. 

[End of Objective 3] 

Objective 4: Education Provided Early Support to States Prior to 
Program Authorization: 

Soon after Hurricane Katrina, Education officials contacted states and 
districts in hurricane-affected areas and sent officials to affected 
areas to discuss needs. 

Prior to the Emergency Impact Aid program's authorization in December 
2005, Education also: 

* advised districts that they could enroll and obtain funding for 
displaced students through the McKinney-Vento Education for Homeless 
Children and Youth Program[Footnote 27] and, 

* used existing authorities to grant waivers of federal requirement to 
maintain 90 percent of prior year's state and local education spending 
to qualify for other Education funding. 

Objective 4: Education Moved Quickly to Implement Program Once 
Authorized: 

Education provided technical assistance to Congress by reviewing draft 
legislation. 

Education officials reported that they began drafting Emergency Impact
Aid applications and guidance while Congress was formulating 
authorizing legislation. 

Education sent a letter to states notifying them of the availability 
of funds on the same day the program was authorized, and within 15 
days of authorization, Education made funding applications available 
to states. 

Education also quickly reviewed applications, and began disbursing 
funds to states about a month after first applications were received. 

Objective 4: State Officials Were Generally Pleased with Education's 
Guidance and Assistance: 

According to officials from selected states, Education was proactive 
in providing assistance and was accessible and responsive to requests 
for information and help. 

Officials from selected states generally reported that Education: 

* coordinated closely with states prior to the Emergency Impact Aid 
program's authorization and; 

* provided ongoing technical assistance during program implementation. 
Page 36 

[End of section] 

Concluding Observations: 

Education acted quickly to help states serve highly mobile students in 
a challenging environment. 

* Education sought to balance the need for expeditious implementation 
with ensuring accountability and program integrity. 

Emergency Impact Aid supported a broad range of services to meet 
student needs; however, some schools and districts: 

* did not use some funds because of concerns about potential audit 
findings or uncertainty about how funds could be spent and; 

* did not use funds for needed counseling services for a variety of 
reasons. 

[End of section] 

GAO on the Web: 

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Contact: 
Chuck Young, Managing Director, Public Affairsyou-ic1@.gao.gov: 
(202) 512-4800: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
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Copyright: 

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright 
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[End of section] 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

George A. Scott, (202) 512-7215 or scottg@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

The following staff members made key contributions to this report: 
Elizabeth Morrison, Assistant Director; Sandra Baxter, Analyst-in- 
Charge; Rachel Batkins; Ellen Phelps Ranen; Lara Laufer; Susan 
Aschoff; James Bennett; Jessica Botsford; Bryon Gordon; Nagla'a El-
Hodiri; Luann Moy; and Peter del Toro. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] This program was created in December 2005 by the Hurricane 
Education Recovery Act, Pub. L. No. 109-148, Division B, Title IV, § 
107, 119 Stat. 2792, 2798. Six hundred forty-five million dollars was 
appropriated in December 2005 by the Department of Defense, Emergency 
Supplemental Appropriations to Address Hurricanes in the Gulf of 
Mexico, and Pandemic Influenza Act, 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-148, 119 
Stat. 2680, 2768. An additional $235 million was appropriated in June 
2006 by the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense, The 
Global War on Terror and Hurricane Recovery, 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-
234, 120 Stat. 418, 463. For the purposes of the program, displaced 
students were defined as those students who on August 22, 2005, 
resided in and were enrolled or eligible to enroll in a school in an 
area for which a major disaster was declared related to Hurricane 
Katrina or Rita and who, as a result of their displacement, enrolled 
in a different school. 

[2] The state of Hawaii did not accept federal Emergency Impact Aid, 
though the state did enroll and serve displaced students. 

[3] Minimum record-keeping requirements entailed keeping adequate 
records to support payment and allowable expenditure amounts, as well 
as auditable records documenting the enrollment and eligibility of 
displaced students claimed for program funding. 

[4] Child Safety, Care and Education Continuity Act of 2011, S. 263, 
112th Cong., 1st Sess. (2011). As of August 31, 2011, no further 
action has been taken with respect to this bill. 

[5] We counted two Louisiana organizations representing multiple 
Catholic schools as private schools. 

[6] We conducted site visits to Louisiana and Texas and interviewed 
officials in Georgia and Mississippi by telephone. 

[7] The Single Audit Act, as amended, requires all state, local, and 
nonprofit entities that expend at least $500,000 per year in federal 
grant awards to obtain an annual single audit. This audit includes an 
audit of the entity's financial statements and schedule of 
expenditures of federal awards. It also includes a determination of 
whether the entity has complied with the provisions of laws, 
regulations, and contracts or grants pertaining to federal awards that 
have a direct and material effect on each major program, and 
procedures related to internal controls over the compliance 
requirements for each major program. See 31 U.S.C. §§ 7501-7507. 

[8] Audits conducted by Education's OIG in Alabama, Georgia, 
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas revealed some errors in district 
student counts. Officials from each of our 4 selected states told us 
they subsequently conducted further audits in additional selected 
districts and verified the eligibility of a sample of students in each 
district. Each selected state submitted final revised student counts 
to Education in the fall of 2007, and Education updated its final 
student count records with these revisions. While Education requested 
final student counts from all participating states at that time, it 
did not revise its records to include revisions from states not 
audited by the OIG. However, these states only received 16 percent of 
total program funding, and most served relatively low numbers of 
displaced students. 

[9] According to Education officials, refunds made electronically or 
by check after a grant award closes can only be credited to a specific 
award if departmental officials identify the refund and make the 
change manually. Further, refunds made by check may not be credited 
back to the appropriate grant award if the check contains insufficient 
identifying information. 

[10] These four states collectively received 80 percent of grant funds. 

[11] Hurricane Education Recovery Act , Pub. L. No. 109-148, Division 
B, Title IV, § 107, 119 Stat. 2792, 2798. $645,000,000 was 
appropriated in December 2005 by the Department of Defense, Emergency 
Supplemental Appropriations to Address Hurricanes in the Gulf of 
Mexico, and Pandemic Influenza Act, 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-148, 119 
Stat. 2680, 2768. An additional $235 million was appropriated in June 
2006 by the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense, The 
Global War on Terror and Hurricane Recovery, 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-
234, 120 Stat. 418, 463. 

[22] Child Safety, Care, and Education Continuity Act of 2011, S. 263, 
112th Cong., 1st Sess. (2011). As of August 31, 2011, no further 
action has been taken with respect to this bill. 

[13] The Single Audit Act, as amended, requires all state, local, and 
nonprofit entities that expend at least $500,000 per year in federal 
grant awards to obtain an annual single audit. This audit includes an 
audit of the entity’s financial statements and schedule of 
expenditures of federal awards. It also includes a determination of 
whether the entity has complied with the provisions of laws, 
regulations, and contracts or grants pertaining to federal awards that 
have a direct and material effect on each major program, and 
procedures related to internal controls over the compliance 
requirements for each major program. 31 U.S.C. §§ 7501-7507. 

[14] Audits conducted by Education’s OIG in Alabama, Georgia, 
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas revealed some errors in district 
student counts. Officials from each of our 4 selected states told us 
they conducted further district audits, and verified the eligibility 
of a sample of students in each district. Each selected state 
submitted final revised student counts to Education in the fall of 
2007, and Education updated its records with these revisions. While 
Education requested final student counts from all participating states 
at that time, it did not revise its records to include revisions from 
states not audited by the OIG. However, these states only received 16 
percent of program funding, and most served relatively low numbers of 
students. 

[15] According to Education officials, refunds made electronically or 
by check after a grant award closes can only be credited to a specific 
award if departmental officials identify the refund and make the 
change manually. Further, refunds made by check may not be credited 
back to the appropriate grant award if the check contains insufficient 
identifying information. 

[16] These four states collectively received 80 percent of grant funds. 

[17] For the purposes of the program, displaced students were defined 
as those students who on August 22, 2005, resided in and were enrolled 
or eligible to enroll in a school in an area for which a major 
disaster was declared related to Hurricane Katrina or Rita and who, as 
a result of their displacement, enrolled in a different school. 

[18] Total enrollment in our 4 selected states (Georgia, Louisiana, 
Mississippi, and Texas) peaked in the second quarter. 

[19] Students who returned to their home schools were no longer 
eligible to be counted as displaced students. 

[20] 42 U.S.C. 11432 (g)(3)(C)(i). 

[21] An individualized education program is a written statement 
required by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act for each 
child with a disability and should include, among other things, a 
description of the special education services and accommodations to be 
provided that child. 20 U.S.C. § 1414(d). 

[22] Two districts did not provide expenditure data, and 2 districts 
were unable to provide data that could be used to determine 
expenditure categories. One additional district placed Emergency 
Impact Aid funds in its general fund and estimated expenditures based 
on total general fund expenditure ratios. 

[23] See GAO, Hurricane Katrina: Barriers to Mental Health Services 
for Children Persist in Greater New Orleans, Although Federal Grants 
Are Helping to Address Them, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-935T] (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 4, 
2009). 

[24] GAO was unable to assess the accuracy of these statements because 
school districts were not required to track costs associated with 
serving displaced students. 

[25] Grant awards for these states and Alabama are open pending 
resolution of OIG audit findings, and returned fund amounts may be 
subject to further change. 

[26] Pre-kindergarten students were not eligible for service in states 
where prekindergarten is not a part of elementary education by law. 

[27] McKinney Vento Homeless Assistance Act, as amended, Title VII, 
Subtitle B, 42 U.S.C. §§11431-11435. 

[End of section] 

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