Recovery Board to Debut Education Spending Site

The government's stimulus spending watchdog is set to launch a website on Monday that will track $10 billion in non-stimulus funding for education jobs, Earl Devaney, chairman of the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board announced on Wednesday. The board, which Congress established in 2009 to oversee $787 billion of economic recovery funding, will host FederalTransparency.gov while it continues to maintain the interactive stimulus-tracking site Recovery.gov.

The goal of the new site is more ambitious. Devaney has said it potentially could be used to monitor the impact of all federal funding. At this point, the board only is authorized to evaluate progress reports from recipients of stimulus funding and money disbursed under the Education Jobs Fund, which Congress created this summer.

"To avoid confusion, the board decided to establish a separate website to track spending under the new education program, which is not part of the Recovery Act. According to Devaney, the new site also will be used for any spending the board is asked to monitor in the future," board officials said in a press release.

The new site, at first, only will provide basic information, such as the total amount received by each recipient, the number of jobs funded and the status of projects, board officials said on Wednesday: "Over time, FederalTransparency.gov will have some of the same features as Recovery.gov,'' Devaney said. "We are putting up the site now as a placeholder so that the public can see where the money is going and where the jobs are being funded in states and territories.''

Under the education jobs program, the Education Department will distribute funds to states and U.S. territories, which will award the money to localities for hiring and rehiring school personnel. Schools are prohibited from using the funds for anything other than paying for salaries and benefits of education-related positions, such as teachers, librarians, secretaries, speech therapists and cafeteria workers.

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