Federal Programs Weekly Brief for Indiana K-12 Federal Program Administrators (May 25-31, 2026)

Indiana K–12 Federal Program Administrators Issue 7 Federal Programs Weekly Brief Curated intelligence for district federal program leads Provided by EnchantED LLC Edition May 25–31, 2026 Focus Grad PLUS Ends…

Indiana K–12 Federal Program Administrators
Issue 7

Federal Programs
Weekly Brief

Curated intelligence for district federal program leads

Provided by EnchantED LLC

Edition May 25–31, 2026
Focus Grad PLUS Ends July 1 · PSLF Changes · Condition of Education · Next Gen SIG · McKinney-Vento Data · SEED Deadline
Items 7 Updates · 4 Opportunities · 6 Deadlines
The Grad PLUS loan program ends July 1 — and with it, a major financing route for the teachers, school psychologists, and administrators in Indiana’s educator pipeline. PSLF faces its own structural overhaul. Federal education data took a step back with a dramatically slimmed-down Condition of Education report. And Indiana’s Next Gen SIG window is opening. Here’s what matters this week.
01
July 1 Deadline Grad PLUS · Educator Pipeline
UPDATE 01

Grad PLUS Loan Program Ends July 1 — Major Financing Route for Teachers and School Psychologists Eliminated

Effective July 1, 2026, the Federal Direct Graduate PLUS Loan program is eliminated under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). Graduate students who did not borrow a Grad PLUS loan before July 1, 2026, or who are starting a new program after that date, will not have access to the program. Those who have already borrowed in their current program before July 1, 2026, may continue borrowing Grad PLUS loans for up to three more academic years or until program completion, whichever comes first. For new graduate borrowers, only the Direct Unsubsidized Loan remains available, capped at $20,500 per year and $100,000 lifetime. The Grad PLUS program had allowed graduate students to borrow up to the full cost of attendance.

Why It Matters for Districts

Indiana districts depend on graduate-degreed professionals — school psychologists, special education specialists, reading specialists, administrators, and licensed counselors — whose preparation programs often cost well beyond the $20,500 annual cap. The elimination of Grad PLUS will make some graduate programs financially inaccessible for prospective educators, tightening the pipeline for already-scarce specialties. Districts should brief HR departments and any staff currently in graduate programs on the grandfathering exception. For staff beginning new programs after July 1, districts may want to explore Title II-A sponsored professional development, employer tuition assistance, or partnerships with Indiana university programs that have reduced tuition to close the gap.

July 1 Deadline PSLF · Teacher Retention
UPDATE 02

PSLF Repayment Landscape Overhauled July 1 — Indiana Teachers on SAVE or PAYE Must Act Before Transition Window Closes

The Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP), created by the OBBBA, launches July 1, 2026, as the sole new income-driven repayment option for federal student loan borrowers. The SAVE plan was vacated by court order in March 2026 and is being wound down; PAYE and Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plans accept no new enrollees after July 1, 2026, and are fully phased out by July 1, 2028. For borrowers pursuing Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), RAP counts as a qualifying repayment plan and the 120-payment, 10-year structure is unchanged. However, new repayment plan terms under RAP range from 10 to 25 years depending on balance — and only 10-year standard repayment plans qualify for PSLF. Borrowers automatically placed on longer RAP terms will not earn PSLF credit unless they proactively elect the standard 10-year plan. Additionally, a new final rule effective July 1, 2026, gives the Secretary of Education authority to disqualify employers found to have a “substantial illegal purpose” from PSLF eligibility — adding uncertainty to nonprofit employer qualifications.

Why It Matters for Districts

Indiana teachers, administrators, and support staff pursuing PSLF represent one of the district’s most effective retention tools. Any staff member currently on SAVE should be directed to studentaid.gov immediately — they will receive 90-day servicer notices beginning July 1 to select a new plan, but proactive action is better. Staff on PAYE or ICR must make a plan change before July 1, 2028, or lose qualifying payment progress. Most critically: staff automatically placed on RAP plans longer than 10 years will not earn PSLF credit. Communicate this urgency to staff now, and consider inviting a student loan specialist to a professional development session this summer. This is a retention risk that has nothing to do with salaries and everything to do with information access.

Federal Data Release NCES · IES Cuts
UPDATE 03

Federal “Condition of Education” Report Released May 29 — Dramatically Slimmed Down to 17 of 702 Indicators

The 2026 Condition of Education, the congressionally mandated annual statistical compendium from the National Center for Education Statistics, was released May 29 — but covers only 17 of the 702 indicators NCES historically tracks. Key findings from the pared-down report: U.S. states spent an average of $20,000 per pupil in 2024 (the most recently available finance data). The report’s scope is drastically reduced from prior years, reflecting the administration’s staff cuts and funding constraints at IES. The Data Quality Campaign praised the report’s timeliness but noted that fewer indicators “could make it less useful for communities who may lack analytical capacity,” such as school districts. NAEP data and graduation data are among those retained; many chronic absenteeism, disaggregated student outcome, and teacher workforce indicators were absent from this edition.

Why It Matters for Districts

The Condition of Education is a key reference document for consolidated application planning, ESSA compliance narratives, and grant application needs assessments. A report covering only 17 of 702 indicators means the national data benchmarks many districts rely on for per-pupil comparisons, demographic trend analysis, and equity documentation may not be available or may be outdated. Indiana districts should rely more heavily on IDOE data portals, the Indiana Education Employment Relations Board, and state-produced reports for FY2026 and FY2027 planning data. Document which NCES indicators your district used in recent grants or consolidated plans — if those indicators are now missing, identify Indiana-specific replacements before next consolidated application cycle.

Indiana Grant Window Opening
UPDATE 04

Indiana Next Gen SIG Cohort 6 Application Window Opening — CSI and TSI Schools Should Prepare Now

IDOE’s Office of School Support and Transformation has indicated the 2025–2026 Next Generation School Improvement Grant (Next Gen SIG) application window is scheduled to open in Spring 2026 with finalist interviews in Summer and awards announced in August/September 2026. The Next Gen SIG is a competitive federal grant funded through Title I school improvement funds, offering up to $300,000 in planning grant funds for the first year and up to $3 million distributed over three implementation years. Eligibility is limited to schools currently identified as Comprehensive Support and Improvement (CSI) or Targeted Support and Improvement (TSI) under Indiana’s ESSA Plan.

Why It Matters for Districts

This is the most significant school improvement grant opportunity in Indiana and applications are competitive — IDOE received 60 applications for Cohort 5. CSI and TSI schools that have not yet applied should confirm their eligibility using the IDOE list, identify an intervention model and priority, and begin scoping an expert transformation partner now before the application window formally opens. Given that federal Comprehensive Centers technical assistance is uncertain due to the OMB impoundment of Comprehensive Centers Program funding, the Next Gen SIG’s embedded planning funds and partner support model are more important than ever for Indiana’s highest-need schools. Contact IDOE’s Office of School Support and Transformation at [email protected] for current application materials.

Federal Data Report McKinney-Vento · Homelessness
UPDATE 05

ED Releases McKinney-Vento Data Summary for School Years 2021–22 Through 2023–24 — National Homelessness Counts Rising

The U.S. Department of Education released its March 2026 McKinney-Vento Education for Homeless Children and Youth Program data summary covering school years 2021–22 through 2023–24. The report tracks the number of students experiencing homelessness, primary nighttime residence, and demographic subgroups. National data shows the count of students experiencing homelessness has been rising across this three-year window, reflecting continued housing instability post-pandemic. Students in doubled-up housing situations (living with other families due to economic hardship) represent the largest subgroup nationally. The data also show persistent academic outcome gaps between students experiencing homelessness and their housed peers, particularly in reading and graduation rates.

Why It Matters for Districts

This data is directly relevant to three compliance areas for Indiana federal program coordinators: (1) Title I, Part A set-aside requirements for homeless students — districts must use a portion of their Title I allocation to serve homeless students even if those students are not in a Title I school; (2) McKinney-Vento liaison training and outreach documentation — rising national counts signal Indiana districts should actively audit whether their local identification processes are capturing all eligible students, especially those in doubled-up housing who are often under-identified; and (3) grant needs assessments — this ED report provides the national context benchmark for McKinney-Vento competitive grant applications and consolidated application narratives. Download and archive this report now before federal data portals are further reduced.

SEED Deadline GrantSolutions · June 1
UPDATE 06

SEED FY2026 Grant Closes June 1 — Final Submission Week for Indiana Applicants via GrantSolutions

The Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED) FY2026 grant competition closes at 11:59 p.m. ET on Monday, June 1, 2026. Awards totaling approximately $90 million will be made to 25–30 entities developing, expanding, or evaluating practices in educator development. Applications are submitted through DOL’s GrantSolutions platform (opportunity number DOL-OESE-33914), not Grants.gov. Indiana applicants should be in final review this week. The competition includes four absolute priorities and three competitive preference priorities; the final version of the Application Notice and Instructions (ANI) governs all submission requirements. The ED-DOL partnership administers this competition, with awards issued by DOL on behalf of ED.

Why It Matters for Districts

This is the last week to submit. Confirm your GrantSolutions account is active, your authorized representative has upload and submit permissions, and your SAM.gov registration is current. If your district has experienced any GrantSolutions technical issues this week, document them and contact the GrantSolutions help desk immediately — technical errors do not automatically extend deadlines, but documented platform failures may support a waiver request if submitted within hours of the deadline. Do not wait until Monday evening to attempt submission.

New Data Workforce Pell · CTE
UPDATE 07

Workforce Pell Grant Launches July 1 — New Federal Aid for Short-Term CTE Programs Creates K–12 Pathway Planning Opportunity

Beginning July 1, 2026, the Workforce Pell Grant Program — created by the OBBBA — will make federal Pell Grant funds available to students enrolled in short-term credential programs as brief as eight weeks. Eligible programs include Emergency Medical Technician certifications, automotive mechanics, construction trades, and other high-demand skilled workforce fields. Students in these programs, who were previously ineligible for Pell Grants, will now have access to federal aid. The program is administered through the existing Pell Grant framework and is designed to expand career and technical education access at the postsecondary level.

Why It Matters for Districts

The Workforce Pell Grant is a postsecondary program, but its launch is directly relevant to Indiana districts building or expanding career pathways. Districts using Title IV-A SSAE funds for CTE-aligned programming or developing dual enrollment partnerships should be aware that students who complete a K–12 CTE pathway may now have enhanced financial access to credential programs immediately after graduation. This strengthens the case for robust CTE pathway development and can be a compelling element of Title IV-A spending plan narratives and competitive grant applications under the new Career Pathways Exploration (CPE) program. Update your district’s career counseling resources to reflect the new Workforce Pell option for students considering short-term credential pathways.

02
Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED) — FY2026 Closes THIS MONDAY, June 1
Eligibility
LEAs, IHEs, nonprofit organizations, and their partnerships
Award Pool
~$90 million; 25–30 new awards
Hard Deadline
June 1, 2026 — 11:59 p.m. ET via GrantSolutions
Opportunity Number
DOL-OESE-33914
Quick Take

Final submission week. Do not wait until Monday to submit. Verify GrantSolutions account access, authorized representative permissions, and SAM.gov active status today. Applications submitted through Grants.gov will not be accepted — GrantSolutions only. If platform issues arise, document immediately and contact the GrantSolutions help desk.

Teacher & School Leader (TSL) Incentive Program — FY2026 Closes June 9
Eligibility
LEAs, consortia, SEAs; charter schools operating as LEAs
Award Size
Multi-year competitive; varies by project scope
Deadline
June 9, 2026 via GrantSolutions
Note
GrantSolutions only — not Grants.gov; SAM.gov active registration required
Quick Take

Applications should be complete and in final internal approval. Given the Grad PLUS elimination and its impact on educator pipeline development, narratives addressing teacher recruitment, retention, and compensation reform are highly timely and likely to resonate with reviewers this cycle. Confirm GrantSolutions AOR access before June 7 to allow time to resolve any issues.

Indiana Next Gen SIG — Cohort 6 (Application Window Opening)
Eligibility
Schools identified as CSI or TSI under Indiana’s ESSA Plan
Award Size
Up to $300K planning (Year 1); up to $3M over 3 implementation years
Awards Announced
August / September 2026
Contact
[email protected] — IDOE eCivis Grants Portal
Quick Take

Application window is opening this spring — confirm your school’s CSI/TSI status using the current IDOE eligible school list, and begin identifying your intervention model and transformation partner now. IDOE received 60 applications for Cohort 5, so competition is real. Funded with Title I school improvement dollars — not ESSER, not a one-time fund. This is a sustainable, multi-year opportunity.

School-Based Mental Health Services (SBMH) — Post-June 1 New Cycle Watch
Active Grantee Status
Midyear reports due June 1 — continuation funding at risk if unfiled
FY2026 Appropriation
$164 million; new competition not yet posted
Focus for New Awards
School psychologist hiring in high-need LEAs
Platform
Monitor Grants.gov; anticipate ~60–90 day window once posted
Quick Take

Active grantees: June 1 midyear report is this Monday — file today if not already done. Non-grantees: given the Grad PLUS elimination’s impact on school psychology graduate pipelines, the timing of the forthcoming SBMH competition is especially urgent. Districts building toward an application should note that school psychologist recruitment will face new structural headwinds — build that context into your needs documentation now.

03
June 1THIS MONDAY
SEED Grant Application Closes AND SBMH Midyear Reports Due. Two hard June 1 deadlines: (1) SEED FY2026 application due at 11:59 p.m. ET via GrantSolutions (DOL-OESE-33914) — submit today, do not wait until end of day Monday; (2) Active SBMH/MHSPD grantees must file midyear performance and budget reports to retain continuation funding — no extensions announced. Both deadlines are firm.
June 92026
TSL FY2026 Application Closes. Teacher and School Leader Incentive Program due via GrantSolutions. Confirm account access, SAM.gov active registration, and AOR signing authority before June 7. Applications submitted through Grants.gov will not be accepted.
June 272026
Louisiana Senate Runoff — HELP Committee Chair Succession Watch. Letlow vs. Fleming runoff determines the Louisiana Senate seat. Cassidy remains chair through the end of his term; Senate Republican leadership will name a successor for the new Congress. Monitor for any shift in committee priorities or hearing schedules affecting MEGA Grant negotiations and ED oversight activity.
June 302026
OBBBA Student Loan Grandfathering Cutoff. Staff currently enrolled in a graduate program who borrowed a federal loan before July 1, 2026, retain access to Grad PLUS for up to three more years at the same institution and program. Staff who switch programs or institutions after this date lose the grandfathering exception. Brief HR and all staff in graduate programs now. This is a fixed, non-extendable deadline.
July 12026
Multiple OBBBA Provisions Take Effect. (1) Grad PLUS loan program ends for new borrowers; (2) Workforce Pell Grant Program launches for short-term credentials; (3) Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) becomes the only new income-driven repayment option; (4) SAVE plan transition window begins — servicers start sending 90-day notices; (5) New PSLF employer definition rule takes effect. Staff on SAVE or pursuing PSLF should be directed to studentaid.gov now.
July 12026
Title I and Formula Funds via G5. Title I, Part A and other formula allocations expected to flow through the existing G5 system on July 1. Confirm district G5 access and drawdown procedures are current. Monitor IDOE for any update on DOL transition timeline and whether G5 remains the platform for FY2027 formula grant management.
04

The Educator Pipeline Squeeze: How July 1 Loan Changes Should Reshape Your Workforce Planning

Three federal changes taking effect July 1, 2026 — the elimination of Grad PLUS, the launch of RAP, and the restructuring of PSLF repayment pathways — together represent the most significant shift in educator workforce financing in decades. Indiana districts that have not yet briefed HR departments, building principals, and relevant staff should do so before the school year ends.

What districts should communicate to staff before June 30: Any staff member pursuing a graduate degree — including education administration, special education, reading specialist, school counseling, or school psychology programs — should be told immediately whether their current borrowing status qualifies for the Grad PLUS grandfathering exception. Staff who began their program and borrowed before July 1 and remain at the same institution in the same program can continue under prior terms for up to three more years. Staff considering switching programs, taking a leave, or transferring institutions after July 1 may lose that protection — they should consult their financial aid office before making any changes.

What districts should plan for in hiring: Beginning in fall 2026, the applicant pool for school psychologists, licensed counselors, and doctoral-level administrators will face new financial headwinds. Programs that cost more than $100,000 in total — which includes most school psychology doctoral programs and many Ed.D. programs — will either require students to bridge the gap with private loans (at higher interest rates with no PSLF eligibility) or reduce program costs. The districts best positioned for the future are those already developing internal grow-your-own pipelines, tuition assistance benefits, and partnerships with Indiana universities that are proactively lowering graduate program costs in response to OBBBA.

Looking Ahead — Week of June 1

The SEED grant closes June 1 and TSL closes June 9 — both are the top near-term action items for Indiana districts with competitive applications in progress. After June 1, watch for any court action or congressional hearing forcing OMB to release the frozen $2 billion in congressionally approved education grants before the September 30 expiration cliff. Indiana districts should also watch for the formal opening of the Next Gen SIG Cohort 6 application window from IDOE, and monitor Grants.gov for the first posting of the new School-Based Mental Health Services competition, which is overdue given the $164 million appropriated for FY2026 and is expected any week.

Sources: U.S. Department of Education (ed.gov) · Education Week · K-12 Dive · NASFAA · NAICU · Brookings Institution · American Federation of Teachers · Saving for College · Britannica Money · IDOE · PHEAA · Finaid.org · Duane Morris LLP
This brief is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or compliance advice. Verify all deadlines directly with IDOE, GrantSolutions, Grants.gov, and studentaid.gov.
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