NEA Signal

What happens in Washington doesn’t stay in Washington—especially when it comes to our classrooms.

In this pilot episode of NEA Signal, we break down the latest federal budget developments that could directly impact Title I and IDEA funding, and what those decisions mean for educators, students, and schools nationwide.

Kelly and William cut through the headlines to explain:
  • What’s happening right now in federal budget negotiations
  • Why proposed funding freezes or cuts matter in real classrooms
  • How millions of students rely on these programs every day
  • What educators can do now to influence what happens next
This isn’t speculation. These decisions are being shaped in real time—and educator voices still matter.
NEA Signal is your short, weekly check-in on what’s happening, what it means, and what educators can do next.

In This Episode
  • Federal budget negotiations and education funding risks
  • Title I and IDEA: what’s at stake nationally
  • Why educator advocacy matters before decisions are finalized
  • How NEA members can take action in the weeks ahead
Stay Connected
Learn more and find action tools at nea.org.
Subscribe to NEA Signal for clear, timely updates made for educators—by educators.

What is NEA Signal?

NEA Signal is the weekly audio briefing for National Education Association members and public education advocates across the country. Each episode delivers what educators need to know: federal policy updates, state-level wins, professional resources, and stories from members making a difference in their communities.

From the classroom to Capitol Hill, NEA Signal keeps you informed and connected to the movement for strong public schools.

Produced by Signal Network, the rapid-response audio platform of The Signal Lab.

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William Farmer: [00:00:00] Before your next class period or your next meeting, Congress made a move that could affect millions of students who rely on federal education funding. The headlines were vague. The impact won't be.

Kelly Post: This is NEA signal, your national. Check-in on what's happening, what it means, and what educators can do next.

Let's start in Washington. This week lawmakers released an early federal budget framework that puts Title One and IDA funding at risk as part of broader spending cuts,

William Farmer: and for folks listening, those on abstract line items, that's reading specialists, special education services and support staff.

Kelly Post: Exactly. Nearly one in three students nationwide. Benefits from Title One programs and 7.5 million students with disabilities rely on IDA protections. Flat funding or cuts means fewer services period,

William Farmer: And educators are already stretched thin. This isn't about efficiency. It's about whether schools can meet students' basic needs.

Kelly Post: What's next? [00:01:00] Negotiations continue over the coming weeks and pressure from educators will matter. This brings us to NEEA's current Federal Action Push, making sure lawmakers hear directly from educators before final budget decisions are locked in.

William Farmer: Because when educators speak, it changes the conversation.

Members aren't asking for extras. They're asking for the resources to do their jobs.

Kelly Post: NEA is urging members to contact their representatives. Now, while these decisions are still being shaped, not after the fact, what's ahead? Key budget negotiations are expected to intensify over the next two weeks,

William Farmer: and NEA will be providing talking points and action tools so members can act quickly when it counts.

Kelly Post: That's NEA signal this week. Subscribe. Share this with a colleague and stay connected@nea.org.

William Farmer: When educators show up together, national leaders listen and students are better for it.