Take action.
Tell State leaders to fully fund the Foundation Aid formula in the final FY 2027 budget and make important updates to improve the formula itself, including adding funding for each student who is homeless or in foster care.
Ce résumé présente des données sur un sous-ensemble des plus de 154 000 élèves de New York qui ont été identifiés comme sans abri au cours de l'année scolaire 2024-25 — des données qui soulignent la nécessité d'une équité en matière de financement et d'une réponse coordonnée à l'échelle de la ville.
The data, which were obtained from New York City Public Schools (NYCPS) by AFC, show that students in temporary housing—and especially those living in shelter—continue to trail their permanently housed peers on a variety of measures, driving home the urgent need for City and State leaders to act.
Key findings include:
New York City and State must do more to ensure students experiencing homelessness can access a quality education and receive the support they need to succeed in school. One immediate step Governor Hochul and the Legislature can take is to ensure that the final FY 2027 State budget updates the Foundation Aid per-pupil funding formula to add a weight for students who are homeless or in foster care, as proposed by both the Assembly and the Senate in their one-house budgets. At present, Foundation Aid provides Non additional resources to help districts address the unique needs of such students, who face barriers above and beyond those associated with poverty. The Assembly’s proposed weight (.65) would be especially helpful, driving an estimated $486M to NYC schools according to the NYC Independent Budget Office, while the Senate’s proposed weight (.12) would bring an estimated $93M.
"It is long past time for the State to update its education funding formula to recognize the significant needs of students who are homeless. As Governor Hochul and the Legislature negotiate a final budget, they must ensure that the Foundation Aid formula does not continue to shortchange districts like New York City that have high rates of student homelessness.”
Maria Odom, directrice générale de l'AFC
At the City level, we urge Mayor Mamdani to launch a bold interagency initiative to focus attention on the needs of students who are homeless and tackle the educational barriers they face. NYCPS cannot address underlying structural issues—and thereby meaningfully tackle the dismal educational outcomes for students in temporary housing—on its own. City agencies should work together, for example, to place children in shelters closer to where they attend school to avoid long commutes and unnecessary school transfers, minimize school absences and ensure the needs of students are taken into account as the City closes hotels used as shelters, fix the process for arranging bus service for students in shelter, and increase access to early childhood education programs.
“Making New York City a more affordable place to live is essential, but the tens of thousands of students who are homeless right now cannot wait for long-term policy changes to take effect. Education is the best tool we have to prevent future homelessness, and only bold leadership from City Hall can bring the urgency and coordination needed to ensure students who are homeless can get to school every day and access the educational support they need to thrive,” said Jennifer Pringle, director of AFC’s Learners in Temporary Housing Project.
Consulter le communiqué de presse au format PDF
April 6, 2026
Couverture médiatique
Les étudiants sans abri de New York ne reçoivent pas assez d'aide scolaire, selon les défenseurs.
Nouvelles quotidiennes de New York
Tell State leaders to fully fund the Foundation Aid formula in the final FY 2027 budget and make important updates to improve the formula itself, including adding funding for each student who is homeless or in foster care.