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COVID Brief: Billions in COVID Aid Stolen or Wasted, AP Investigation Finds

A weekly roundup of headlines about how the pandemic is shaping schools and education policy, vetted by AEI Visiting Fellow John Bailey.

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This is our biweekly briefing on the pandemic, vetted by John Bailey. .

This Week鈥檚 Top Story 

How Billions in COVID-19 Relief Aid Was Stolen or Wasted

  • : “An Associated Press analysis found that fraudsters potentially stole more than $280 billion in COVID-19 relief funding; another $123 billion was wasted or misspent. Combined, the loss represents 10% of the $4.2 trillion the U.S. government has so far disbursed in COVID relief aid.”
  • 鈥淗ow could so much be stolen? 鈥 In short, [investigators and outside experts] say, the grift was just way too easy.鈥
  • 鈥淢ost of the looted money was swiped from three large pandemic-relief initiatives launched during the Trump administration and inherited by President Joe Biden. Those programs were designed to help small businesses and unemployed workers survive the economic upheaval caused by the pandemic.鈥

The Big Three

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  • : “We estimate the impact of district-level schooling mode (in-person versus hybrid or virtual learning) in the 2020-21 school year on students’ pass rates on standardized tests in grades 3 to 8 across 11 states.”
  • : 鈥淪chool districts with in-person learning had smaller declines than those with remote or hybrid learning models.鈥

  • : “In this interim analysis of children aged 5 years and younger, safety surveillance of more than 245鈥000 COVID-19 mRNA vaccine doses over nine months did not detect a safety signal for any outcome during the 21 days after vaccination. Importantly, no cases of myocarditis or pericarditis occurred after vaccination.” 
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  • : 鈥淧arents of young children have long been among the most susceptible groups for vaccine hesitancy, since most shots are administered to infants who are often vulnerable to deadly diseases. Online anti-vaccine rhetoric often appeals specifically to mothers, calling on them to 鈥榩rotect鈥 their children from the shots.鈥
  • Heather Simpson, a mother in Dallas, started Back to the Vax, an organization that 鈥渁ims to counter that [anti-vax] narrative by supporting parents, educating doctors and creating online resources. The organization recommends parents call a doctor instead of searching for answers online, and also advises doctors on communicating with parents who are on the fence about vaccines.”

COVID-19 Research

  • “An expert panel of the FDA on Thursday , unanimously recommending that they target an Omicron strain known as XBB that’s responsible for nearly every infection in the U.S.”
  • and . And more via .
  • : “Pfizer said it could distribute reformulated doses as early as the end of July, depending on the strain selected. Moderna said it expects to begin shipping updated doses, pending FDA approval, 鈥榖y the end of the summer.鈥 Novavax said it could have updated doses available in the fall.”

  • on a new : “MIT researchers asked undergraduate students to test whether chatbots 鈥榗ould be prompted to assist non-experts in causing a pandemic.鈥 “
  • “Within an hour, the chatbots suggested four potential pandemic pathogens.”
  • “Our results demonstrate that artificial intelligence can exacerbate catastrophic biological risks. Highly intelligent students without any relevant technical background in the life sciences can use 鈥 chatbots to walk them through the process of identifying and acquiring publicly known potential pandemic pathogens. This represents a major international security vulnerability.”

City & State News

California: federal COVID relief despite deep, widespread learning loss.

Kansas: : 鈥業 have kids that legitimately cannot read.鈥

Minnesota: to help cover $97 million gap in proposed budget.

Viewpoints

Educators Beware: As Budget Cuts Loom, Now Is NOT the Time to Quit Your Job: Via Katherine Silberstein and Marguerite Roza in 蜜桃影视. “In the last few years, the hiring bonanza has been fueled by a flood of federal pandemic relief funds (ESSER). Districts across the country used that money to add staff that they wouldn鈥檛 have been able to afford otherwise. Now, that funding is set to disappear by the fall of 2024, which means districts are paying for more employees than they can afford.”

How COVID Changed High School Seniors’ Plans About College and Their Future Careers: . “Of this year鈥檚 graduating class, who were ninth graders when the health crisis began, more than 40% of students changed their thinking about their college major or future career because of COVID, according to new .”

The Pandemic Wiped Out Decades of Progress for Preschoolers. It鈥檚 Time to Get Them Back On Track: .

…And on a Lighter Note

Swearing, Dippin Dots and an Economics Lesson in Inflation: .

School’s out for the Summer: .

Disclosure: John Bailey is an adviser to the Walton Family Foundation, which provides financial support to 蜜桃影视.

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