WASHINGTON, D.C. – Your U.S. Representative, David Price, is working on legislation with another North Carolina representative known as the Keep Teachers Teaching Act, which would allow states and school districts to apply for federal grants to create programs to help with teacher retention.
According to the Congressional Research Service, half of all teachers stop teaching after the first five years.
The bill would also allow states and school districts to share information about programs to improve teacher retention. Rep. Price introduced this bill last year as well.
Rep. Price is also co-sponsoring the bill of North Carolina Representative G.K. Butterfield, called the Support Educators and Reinvest in Valuable Education Act. Many teachers have the option of teaching special education or teaching math and science in a low-income school for five years to receive $17,500 in loan forgiveness.
Rep. Butterfield’s bill would make it so that those who teach any subject in low-income schools for five years would be eligible for the same amount of loan forgiveness.
Both Rep. Butterfield and Rep. Price say that these proposed bills are meant to help out states like North Carolina who have seen budget cuts to education.
Rep. Butterfield is also a co-sponsor of Rep. Price’s Keep Teachers Teaching bill.
Tune in to the WCHL Friday Morning News with Ron Stutts at 8:00 a.m. to hear from Congressman Price about the legislation he’s sponsoring to help with education nationwide.
Related Stories
‹

In Chapel Hill, NC School Superintendent Mo Green Offers a Plan for 'Achieving Educational Excellence'Mo Green's "Achieving Educational Excellence" plan seeks to make North Carolina schools the best in the nation by 2030.

On the Porch: Sen. Natalie Murdock - Good Work for NC District 20This Week:
NC Sen. Natalie Murdock is a native North Carolinian, UNC alum, and senate representative for District 20, which encompasses Durham and Chatham County. She served as Deputy Communications Director for NC Attorney General Josh Stein. She is the first woman of color under 40 to be elected to the NCGA and was elected in 2020 with over 100,000 votes. As a freshman senator she immediately filed over 100 bills that range from supporting black maternal health, expanding healthcare access for ALL to providing greater access to the ballot.

'Everything We Do Has Meaning': Lloyd Kramer Reflects on a Career in the HumanitiesOutgoing Carolina Public Humanities director Lloyd Kramer reflects on his career, and the social importance of history and the humanities.

'We Are 49th Out Of 50': Public School Forum of NCWith education at the center of state budget talks, the Public School Forum of NC releases a report on the state of North Carolina's schools.
![]()
What to Expect (and Not Expect) in the General Assembly Short SessionImmigration, education, marijuana, childcare, open records: which bills will pass the General Assembly this year? Sen. Graig Meyer weighs in.

DeSantis Is Defending New Slavery Teachings. Civil Rights Leaders See a Pattern of ‘Policy Violence’Written by STEVE PEOPLES, BRENDAN FARRINGTON AND KAT STAFFORD Civil rights activists cheered when Ron DeSantis pardoned four Black men wrongfully convicted of rape as one of his first actions as Florida’s governor. But four years later, as DeSantis eyes the presidency, their hope that the Republican would be an ally on racial justice has long faded. Instead, […]

North Carolina House Unlikely To Proceed With Education Overhaul, Speaker SaysWritten by HANNAH SCHOENBAUM A sweeping education proposal that would take away power from North Carolina superintendents and the State Board of Education, placing it in the hands of public school parents, is unlikely to advance this session, the House speaker said Thursday. The 26-page bill, introduced last week but pulled from a committee agenda, would […]

CHCCS Elementary Schools' Early Start Time Will Not Move ForwardFacing a bus driver shortage, the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education recently brainstormed solutions to get students to school on time. One possibility was moving elementary school start times forward. But some parents were opposed to this change, and the school board decided against it.

'How Are We Engaging in Schools?' Orange County Shares Survey ResultsIn its first meeting of the year, the Orange County Schools Board of Education discussed results from a survey that aimed to better understand issues facing parents and students.

Chapel Hill High School Choir Performs at Radio City, Carnegie HallLast month, choir students at Chapel Hill High School made a trip to New York to perform at Radio City Music Hall and Carnegie Hall — along with the Rockettes and Eric Whitacre.
›