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House Bill

H.R. 631

119th Congress

PARTS Act of 2025

In Committee
Introduced:Jun 27, 2025

Primary Sponsor

John R. Moolenaar

John R. Moolenaar

Representative

Republican
MI-2

Cosponsors

14

Quick Stats

Policy Area

Education

Summary

The PARTS Act would allow states to receive federal education funding in a consolidated lump sum, which they could then use for any educational purpose permitted by state law. This gives states more flexibility in how they spend federal education dollars, rather than having to follow strict federal guidelines.

Latest Action

Referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

SponsorJohn R. Moolenaar (R-MI)
Introduced6/27/2025
StatusReferred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
ChamberHouse
Data from Congress.gov

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Vote Prediction

PARTS Act of 2025

The PARTS Act would allow states to receive federal education funding in a consolidated lump sum, which they could then use for any educational purpose permitted by state law. This gives states more flexibility in how they spend federal education dollars, rath

Community Breakdown

Pass

0%

Fail

0%

0 predictions

The PARTS Act would allow states to receive federal education funding in a consolidated lump sum, which they could then use for any educational purpose permitted by state law. This gives states more flexibility in how they spend federal education dollars, rather than having to follow strict federal guidelines.

Bill Number
631
Sponsor
John R. Moolenaar (R-MI)
Introduced
6/27/2025
Status
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Policy Area
Education

Data from Congress.gov

AI-generated summary

Fact Sheet

Title
PARTS Act of 2025
Bill Number
631
Sponsor
John R. Moolenaar (R-MI)
Status
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Introduced
6/27/2025
Summary
The PARTS Act would allow states to receive federal education funding in a consolidated lump sum, which they could then use for any educational purpose permitted by state law. This gives states more flexibility in how they spend federal education dollars, rather than having to follow strict federal

Data from Congress.gov

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