Statement from United States Commissioner of Education Earl James McGrath
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OCR Page 1 of 3STATEMENT *
"We know that public elementary and secondary school enrollment will
reach new peaks in the years immediately ahead,' Dr. McGrath said in a recent
interview, Treminding that "the schoolhousing.shortage will become more critical
year by year. Making an "armchair" calculation, he forecast that by 1960
to
an additional 275,000 instruction rooms would be required, or an over-all
total of 600,000 at a cost of about 18 billion dollars in terms of 1951 dollars.
"This nationwide survey," Dr. McGrath continued, "definitely alerts
us all to the fact that financing practices will have to be improved and new
and substantial resources for public school construction will have to be tapped
if cufficient funds are to be raised to cancel out the Ideficit education'
created by educationally unsatisfact. >ry and unsafe structures."
In testimony before a Subcommittee of the House Committee on Education
and Labor considering school building legislation last April, Dr. McGrath
stated: "Even after maximum local and state effort has been brought to bear
on. the problem, there will rema in a significant Craction of need. The unprece-
dented size or the total problem will call for action on a bolder scale than
will be possible without federal participation. Furthernore, the situation is
so urgent that it cahnot be left to the states and districts to meet over
an
extended period of time Both because the problem is so big and because
it i.s sò urgent, federal action to assis.t and encourage the states and local
communities is inescapably necessary ."
* By Earl J: McGrath, U: S. Commissioner of Education, Federal Security
Agency, Washington, D. C., which appeared in "Taking Stock of School Plant
Needs", by Elaine Exton, School Roard Journal, February 1953, pp . 44-46.
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