In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress enacted several programs that provided federal funds "to prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus" in elementary and secondary education, or provided funds that could be used for that purpose. These programs include the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund, Governor's Emergency Education Relief (GEER) Fund, Emergency Assistance to Non-Public Schools (EANS) program, and Homeless Children and Youth (ARP-HCY) program, which made grants to states (i.e., the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico). Funds were also appropriated for programs providing similar types of support to the outlying areas and the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE). Each of these programs was authorized under the Education Stabilization Fund (ESF) or provisions appropriating funds for similar purposes in response to the pandemic.
Funds for ESF programs for states were authorized and funded by the three acts below. Each act also provided funds for the outlying areas and the BIE.
These acts collectively provided $200.1 billion in appropriations for state programs, $1.4 billion for the outlying areas, and $1.4 billion for the BIE. The programs for states and outlying areas are administered by the U.S. Department of Education (ED). Programs to support the BIE are administered by the Department of the Interior and are not discussed further in this In Focus.
This In Focus focuses on changes to the period for the liquidation of funds obligated under the aforementioned programs for states and the outlying areas and potential issues for congressional consideration.
Each program had a statutorily defined period of obligation (availability) during which grantees were required to obligate the funds awarded and a later date by which grantees had to expend (liquidate) the obligated funds. Section 421 of the General Education Provisions Act (GEPA), commonly referred to as the Tydings period, extends the period of obligation of funds by governors, state educational agencies (SEAs), local educational agencies (LEAs), and outlying areas by one year beyond the period of availability included in statutory language. Thus, with the inclusion of the Tydings period, the period of availability of funds was through September 30, 2022, for the CARES Act; through September 30, 2023, for the CRRSAA; and through September 30, 2024, for the ARPA. Following the Tydings period, a grantee or subgrantee (e.g., LEA) must liquidate the obligated funds within 120 days or within the ED-approved period of a liquidation extension. Funds not liquidated accordingly are to revert to the Treasury of the United States.
For state-administered programs (which include the programs administered by the outlying areas) in accordance with Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards, as adopted by ED, ED may extend the period for the liquidation of funds beyond the 120-day period following the Tydings period by approving late liquidation requests. These flexibilities apply to the ESSER Fund, GEER Fund, EANS program, ARP-HCY, and funds provided to the outlying areas.
Using ED-developed templates, ED during the Biden Administration permitted an SEA (or outlying area) to request an extension of up to 14 months beyond the automatic 120-day period to liquidate properly obligated funds, for a total extension of 18 months. For ESSER I and GEER I, the 14-month period ended on March 28, 2024. For ESSER II, GEER II, and EANS I, the 14-month period ended on March 28, 2025. For ESSER III, EANS II, and ARP-HCY, the 14-month period was to end on March 28, 2026. Similarly, the outlying areas could use ED-developed templates to request an extension of up to 14 months beyond the automatic 120-day period to liquidate funds received under the CARES Act, CRRSAA, and ARPA. The templates were posted prior to the end of the period of obligation of funds. For example, the ESSER III and EANS II extension templates were posted on January 9, 2024. In an FAQ document released on June 26, 2025, ED stated that it would not grant any additional liquidation extensions for expenditures of funds beyond March 28, 2026.
As discussed previously, ED indicated that it would accept requests from SEAs and outlying areas to extend the liquidation period for funds awarded under each of the aforementioned programs using the ED-developed templates provided the funds were properly obligated by the relevant deadline. Data on these requests, their disposition, and the amount of funds for which an extension was granted were provided to CRS by ED on March 5, 2025. ED noted the data were current as of February 28, 2025.
Based on the data provided by ED, 47 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the outlying areas had submitted and received approval for a liquidation extension for at least one of the programs discussed in this In Focus. Seven of these states and one outlying area also had applications for liquidation extensions under ESSER II, EANS I, EANS II, or ARP-HCY that were either under review or pending approval by ED. The states that had not submitted a request for any liquidation extensions as of February 28, 2025, were Louisiana, Washington, and West Virginia. Overall, 164 liquidation extension requests submitted by the states had been approved, allowing $4.8 billion (2.4% of total state grant awards) to be expended for up to 14 months beyond the automatic 120-day extension period to liquidate funds. Of these funds, $3.3 billion (69.5% of the total approved for late liquidation extensions) were ESSER III funds approved for the late liquidation extension. The aforementioned unpublished data provided to CRS suggest that no requests for a liquidation extension had been denied. Each of the outlying areas received approval for at least one liquidation extension request, totaling $384 million (27.1% of total grant awards to outlying areas).
On March 28, 2025, ED sent a letter to State Chiefs of Education, including the outlying areas, indicating that ED had "reconsidered" state requests for late liquidation extensions and was modifying the extensions of the late liquidation period for the ESF, "including all programs funded by the CRRSA and ARP acts," to end that day at 5:00 p.m. ET. As discussed above, ED had previously made late liquidation templates available in advance of the expiration of the period of obligation for the relevant programs. In making this new announcement, ED indicated that states "could not rely on the Department adhering to its original decision" and this was "especially true because the extension was a matter of administrative grace" and that "any reliance on a discretionary extension subject to reconsideration by the agency was unreasonable." The letter also stated that "extending deadlines for COVID-related grants ... years after the COVID pandemic ended is not consistent with the Department's priorities and thus not a worthwhile exercise of its discretion."
In the same letter, ED indicated that it will consider extensions to the liquidation period on an individual project-specific basis. In making a request, a state or outlying area has to explain "how a particular project's extension is necessary to mitigate the effects of COVID on American students' education" and "why the Department should exercise its discretion" to grant a state's request.
On April 3, 2025, ED followed up with additional details about how an application for an extension to the liquidation period for an individual project could be submitted. It indicated that it will review "each request as it is received and work to provide a response as quickly as possible."
On April 10, 2025, 16 states and the District of Columbia sued ED and the Secretary of Education over ED's withdrawal of the late liquidation extension authority. The lawsuit says that the change in ED policy "triggered chaos" for SEAs and LEAs and has created a "massive, unexpected funding gap that is causing serious harm to the public, cutting off vital education services, all to the detriment of the students whom Congress intended to benefit."
On June 3, 2025, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York entered a preliminary injunction in New York et al. v. Department of Education et al., barring ED from "enforcing or implementing" the Secretary's March 28, 2025, revocation of late liquidation authority against the plaintiffs in the case or a subsequent ED effort to have late liquidation authority expire on May 25. On June 26, 2025, the Secretary announced that all states, not just those involved in the lawsuit, can continue to
liquidate funds per any previously-approved liquidation extensions for ESF programs that were in place prior to March 28, 2025 during the pendency of this litigation and unless and until the Department is allowed to uniformly apply the policy described in the March 28 letter to all States.
Thus, as of the cover date of this report, all states can continue expending ESF program funds under the same requirements that were in place prior to March 28, 2025. ED has appealed the preliminary injunction. The Secretary's June 26, 2025, statement signals that if ED secures judicial relief from the preliminary injunction, it will uniformly apply the March 28 policy to all states. This would once again mean that the late liquidation extensions provided by ED prior to March 28, 2025, would be terminated. However, on June 20, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit denied ED's request for an immediate stay of the preliminary injunction.
With respect to project-specific requests for late liquidation received prior to the Secretary's latest announcement, as of June 26, 2025, ED reported receiving over 675 project-specific requests for late liquidation extensions from 34 states and outlying areas. Of these, ED had reviewed and issued determinations for over 500 project-specific requests but had not publicly announced the outcomes. ED has said it will continue to process project-specific requests for extensions that are not covered by a state's approved liquidation extension request that was in place prior to March 28, 2025.