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Equitable School Facilities

Today’s challenges require school campuses and facility infrastructure to meet new demands:

Ensuring education quality and equity; overturning community and racial injustice; expanding early education; and being a focal point of local infrastructure that supports community health, well-being, and climate resilience in a carbon neutral future.

Why School Facility Infrastructure Matters

Every day, millions of elementary and secondary school children in the U.S. attend public schools with deteriorated and obsolete facilities that undermine achievement, harm health, and are not climate resilient. Why? There are two main reasons:

  • Capital funding for public school facility infrastructure remains the most regressive element of public education finance.
  • State and local policies, guidelines, and practices for public school facilities remain under-developed and largely disconnected from education equity, health equity, and overall community resilience.

CC+S aims to remedy inequitable finance structures and link planning and investment decisions in ways that leverage co-benefits across education, health, and climate.

Equity & Adequacy

The conditions and qualities of school facility infrastructure matter to children, families, and communities. School facility inequity was a major complaint in the 1954 Brown v Board of Education case and remains a problem in communities across America today. Decades of research confirm that the conditions and qualities of school facilities can positively or negatively impact students, teachers, and overall academic achievement.

The process of planning, advocating for, and designing school facilities can build social capital and foster the rebuilding of trust with communities undermined by discrimination and neglect.

Featured Publications

View all publications >

Are California Public Schools Scratch-Cooking Ready? A survey of food service directors on the state of school kitchens

To understand the opportunities and challenges to increasing healthy school meals across California, this study investigates the scratch-cooking readiness of the state’s public schools’ kitchens.

Financing School Facilities in California: A 10-year Perspective

This study explains California’s approach to financing public school facilities and examines the level and distribution of state and local school facility funding since 2006, including facility funding for charter schools.

Education Equity Requires Modern School Facilities

Every day millions of elementary and secondary school children in the U.S. attend public school in deteriorated and obsolete facilities that harm their health and undermine achievement. Why? Because capital funding for public school facility infrastructure remains the most regressive element of public education finance.
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Center for Cities + Schools
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  • About CC+S
    • Overview
    • Awards
    • People
  • Major Initiatives
    • Overview
    • Y-PLAN (Youth, Plan, Learn, Act Now)
      • What is Y-PLAN?
      • Why Y-PLAN?
      • Y-PLAN in Action
      • Y-PLAN FAQs
    • Equitable School Facilities
    • PLUS Research Fellows
    • Emerging Areas of Work
      • Unhoused Student Policy
      • Education Workforce Housing
      • Healthy School Food
  • In the News
  • Blog
  • Publications
  • Contact Us
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