22-07-2025
Trump funding freeze leaves children of migrant farm workers without vital education services
The Trump administration froze $6 billion in funding for educational programs, including the national Migrant Education Program. While the administration in recent days said it will release about $1 billion of those funds, for summer programs and others, the Migrant Education Program money is not among them.
Advertisement
In addition, President Trump has proposed cutting the Migrant Education Program altogether in the next fiscal budget, saying the programs are expensive, haven't been proven to be effective, and service immigrants who aren't in the country legally. However, the program focuses on families who move due to their employment, regardless of immigration status. While some working the jobs don't have legal immigration status, many hold visas designed for seasonal and agricultural workers, or are US citizens.
Children in the regular summer school program at Boland Elementary School followed along with their teacher Riley McLaughlin, where the Massachusetts Migrant Education Program summer programming would be taking place if funding wasn't frozen by the Trump administration in Springfield on July 15.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
The Migrant Education Program, which has operated in Massachusetts since 1966, ensures children like Ery don't fall behind academically as they transfer between different school districts or miss school altogether because of the moves or to work alongside their parents. The program
provides additional academic support for children who might be struggling with an inconsistent curriculum and interrupted learning.
Advertisement
To qualify for the program, children's parents must have moved recently for work in meat or vegetable processing, farm and dairy farms, plant nurseries, or fisheries, or worked in such fields in the past 36 months. Advocates worry cuts to the program will set children, who already are struggling with pandemic learning losses, further behind academically.
Ery's mother, Vicenta Gutierrez, repeatedly moved for job opportunities, working in tobacco fields in Florida, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
Last year, the grant served 438 students for summer programs statewide, said Emily Hoffman, director of the program in Massachusetts. Ery was among the 56 who attended the summer program offered at Boland Elementary for students
starting at age 3 and continuing through fifth grade.
While Boland cannot offer the program this summer, due to the cuts, about 120 students in other parts of the state were able to stay in the summer program, thanks to leftover funds from last year, Hoffman said. However, that's only a fraction of the more than 500 students who qualify, requiring program coordinators to prioritize those with higher needs, she said.
'This federally funded program is essential to making sure that children of agricultural workers and fishers receive the support they need to succeed at school,' said Alexandra Smith, a spokesperson for the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, which contracts with the nonprofit Collaborative for Educational Services to provide the services to students.
The loss of the program at Boland Elementary is 'heartbreaking' and a 'huge step backwards,' as students will have to go without much-needed services,
said Lisa Bakowski, the school's principal, who oversaw the program for the past three summers.
Advertisement
'Many of them don't have the resources to find other support,' Bakowski said. ' It's the kids that are going to lose out on it.'
Seidner Reynoso, 20, held the book that he used in his English class during the last school year through the Massachusetts Migrant Education Program in Springfield. Reynoso, who's from Guatemala, is learning English through the program.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Bakowski said the children enrolled in the program are among the most vulnerable in the community. Their parents work in the fields all day and often don't speak English.
'They were doing their part so that mom and dad could work their full days,' she said of the students attending the summer program.
Students who qualified for summer instruction at their schools would attend regular summer school in the morning and later in the day be bused to Boland Elementary, where they'd engage in additional instruction or enrichment activities until their parents could pick them up.
With summer instruction, Bakowski said, children don't need to start the academic year remediating. Instead, they return to school ready to pick up where they left off.
'It sickens me that it's become a political issue when it really should never have been,' Bakowski said. 'It's about the betterment of humanity and being able to work to assist and provide for pockets of our community that need it.'
A critical aspect of the program is the relationship staff members cultivate with families, Hoffman said. By employing multilingual staff who are culturally sensitive to the needs of this specific population, the program is able to more effectively reach and engage with families, she said.
It is the connection with the families that allow children to catch up academically and remain in school, Hoffman said. Sometimes one single conversation with a parent leads to a child participating in the program and later increasing their likelihood to graduate from high school.
Advertisement
Boland Elementary students in summer school left the school on July 15.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
The program has helped generations of children to graduate from high school and pursue professional careers.
'I have three professional children: an engineer, a dentist, and another one becoming a therapist,' Lynn resident Juan Payan said in Spanish. 'All of this, we owe it to the program.'
Payan moved to the US from the Dominican Republic on a visa in 2010 to work in Chelsea fields harvesting leafy greens, and the education program was the foundation for his children to learn English, finish high school, and attend college, he said.
Payan, who's now a US citizen, no longer works in the fields, but he said he's grateful for all the support he and his family received when they were beginning their life in the United States.
In Springfield, Gutierrez, who immigrated from Guatemala and is taking steps toward becoming a US citizen, is now scrambling to find babysitters or family members to watch
Ery while she works at a laundromat.
He's falling behind academically, Gutierrez said, and she worries his chances of finishing high school and getting better job opportunities than she had will diminish without the return of the program.
'We're not the only ones doing this kind of work, but we are the only people that are paying attention to and serving and connecting with this specific population,' Hoffman said. 'If this program ceases to exist, that is lost.'
Marcela Rodrigues can be reached at