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Detroit school district begins to weigh options for the end of $94.4 million literacy lawsuit settlement

April 5, 2026

The Detroit Public Schools Community District is preparing for the depletion of $94. 4 million in settlement funds from a 2016 federal literacy lawsuit, which will run out after next school year. The district has been spending approximately $30 million annually from these one-time funds, primarily to employ 267 academic interventionists who work with early elementary students and have contributed to improved literacy outcomes.

Who is affected

  • Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD) students, particularly K-2 students and struggling readers
  • 267 academic interventionists whose positions may be at risk
  • 44 teachers hired to reduce class sizes
  • 43 teachers hired as teacher leaders for coaching
  • District educators receiving merit pay for meeting literacy goals
  • High school students who experienced inequities during the original lawsuit period
  • DPSCD administration and school board members
  • Superintendent Nikolai Vitti
  • Community advocates like Imani Foster and 482Forward

What action is being taken

  • The district is spending approximately $30 million per year from settlement funds
  • 267 academic interventionists are currently working with students in grades K-2
  • The district is using settlement funds to pay for reduced class sizes, teacher leaders, and reading tutors
  • Superintendent Vitti is speaking at board committee meetings about the funding situation
  • The district is planning to use anticipated increases in state at-risk funding to cover interventionist costs

Why it matters

  • This situation matters because the interventionists and other programs funded by the settlement have demonstrably improved literacy outcomes in Detroit, with students showing greater progress than peers without such support and the district achieving an 11-year high in third-grade proficiency. However, despite this progress, DPSCD's overall proficiency rates (15.4%) remain drastically below the state average (38.9%), indicating that students still face significant literacy challenges stemming from the historical inequities identified in the original lawsuit. The potential loss of these effective programs could reverse recent gains and leave struggling students, particularly those in poverty, without critical academic support needed to close achievement gaps.

What's next

  • The board will begin more in-depth conversations about making up the funding gap around the beginning of next year
  • The district will monitor state legislature discussions about increases to weighted per-pupil at-risk funding
  • Next school year (the final year of the three-year plan) will continue implementing current settlement-funded programs
  • The district may explore using other state or federal grants to absorb costs of some initiatives like educator merit pay

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com