- What’s proposed:
Update Minnesota law so Tribal contract schools are explicitly eligible for all state education grants that school districts and charter schools can apply for. - How it’s done:
Direct the Revisor of Statutes to replace language like: “school districts and charter schools”
with
“school districts, charter schools, and Tribal contract schools”
across all legislatively created grant programs. - Cost:
No fiscal impact — this change does not add new funding, it only expands eligibility. - Why this is needed:
- Tribal contract schools are often excluded unintentionally because statutes don’t name them.
- This has already caused failed grant applications, including for programs like Native Language Revitalization grants.
- Tribal leaders and the Tribal Nations Education Committee identified this as a persistent equity issue.
- What changes in practice:
- MDE can immediately consider Tribal contract school applications for competitive grants.
- Tribal schools compete on the same footing as districts and charters.
- Who it affects:
- Tribal contract schools affiliated with:
- Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe
- White Earth Nation
- Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe
- Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe
- Tribal contract schools affiliated with:
- Impact on students and families:
- Improves access to educational resources within Tribal communities.
- Helps close opportunity gaps without creating new bureaucracy or costs.
- Bottom line:
This is a technical statutory fix that removes an exclusionary wording problem so Tribal contract schools are treated like other public schools for grant eligibility.
Tribal Contract Schools Eligible for Grant Funding – Key Takeaways FY26-27 Minnesota Education
Response
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