[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. 4028 Introduced in Senate (IS)]

<DOC>






119th CONGRESS
  2d Session
                                S. 4028

  To expand equitable access to developmentally-appropriate literacy 
 materials, programs, and family engagement in reading, especially in 
underserved communities, and strengthen the connection between literacy 
              and long-term academic and economic success.


_______________________________________________________________________


                   IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

                             March 9, 2026

    Mr. Kim introduced the following bill; which was read twice and 
  referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 A BILL


 
  To expand equitable access to developmentally-appropriate literacy 
 materials, programs, and family engagement in reading, especially in 
underserved communities, and strengthen the connection between literacy 
              and long-term academic and economic success.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the 
United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

    This Act may be cited as the ``Open Books, Open Doors Act''.

SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

    Congress finds the following:
            (1) The 2024 National Assessment of Educational Progress 
        reading assessment results show a continued decline in reading 
        scores for both fourth and eighth grade students, with average 
        scores lower than both 2022 and 2019 levels.
            (2) According to the Annie E. Casey Foundation, 1 in 6 
        children who are not reading proficiently in third grade do not 
        graduate from high school on time, a rate 4 times greater than 
        that for proficient readers.
            (3) Families with incomes of $100,000 or more have nearly 
        twice the number of books than families with less than $35,000 
        in annual income, at 125 and 73 respectively.
            (4) According to the American Consortium for Equity in 
        Education, 45 percent of children in the United States live in 
        neighborhoods that lack public libraries and stores that sell 
        books or in homes where books are not present.
            (5) 85 percent of all juveniles who interact with the 
        juvenile court system are functionally low literate.
            (6) Only 2 percent of the 20,600,000 17- to 21-year-olds in 
        the United States are eligible, propensed to serve, and of high 
        academic quality for military service, and only 29 percent of 
        youth are eligible for military service without requiring some 
        form of a standards waiver.
            (7) A 2025 study from the University of Florida and the 
        University College London found that daily reading for pleasure 
        among individuals in the United States has declined by more 
        than 40 percent over the past 2 decades, a trend with serious 
        implications for children's literacy development and long-term 
        education outcomes.
            (8) Children born to parents with low literacy skills are 
        likely to have low skills themselves, perpetuating poverty and 
        other socioeconomic issues related to low literacy.
            (9) According to the Department of Education, 43,000,000 
        adults in the United States, nearly 1 in 5 adults in the United 
        States, can't read well enough to hold a basic job.
            (10) According to the Nobel Prize-winning economist James 
        Heckman, every $1 invested in early childhood, including 
        literacy programs, yields between $4 to $16 in long-term 
        economic benefits.
            (11) According to the World Literacy Foundation, low 
        literacy costs the United States economy more than 
        $300,000,000,000 in lost earnings, lower workplace 
        productivity, higher crime, and more government assistance.

SEC. 3. DEFINITIONS.

    In this Act:
            (1) ESEA definitions.--The terms ``local educational 
        agency'' and ``State educational agency'' have the meanings 
        given the terms in section 8101 of the Elementary and Secondary 
        Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7801).
            (2) Book desert.--The term ``book desert'' means a 
        geographic area (as defined by census tract, ZIP Code, or local 
        educational agency) where children and families have limited or 
        non-consistent access to developmentally-appropriate, high-
        interest, and culturally relevant books and print materials in 
        the home, schools, or community settings, as evidenced by 
        meeting 1 or more of the following criteria, as determined by 
        the Secretary:
                    (A) Fewer than 1 book available per 300 children 
                younger than 18 years of age.
                    (B) No public library or bookstore within a 1-mile 
                radius in an urban area or a 10-mile radius in a rural 
                area.
                    (C) A high concentration of poverty, housing 
                instability, or limited English proficiency that 
                contributes to barriers in accessing books.
                    (D) 40 percent of households with children lacking 
                reading materials at home.
                    (E) Limited or no book distribution programs, 
                literacy events, or reading-focused community 
                infrastructure.
            (3) Evidence-based literacy program.--The term ``evidence-
        based literacy program'' means any instructional or community-
        based program, intervention, or practice that--
                    (A) is grounded in the science of reading and 
                incorporates methods shown, through high-quality 
                research, to be effective in improving literacy skills 
                for infants, toddlers, children, teens, young adults, 
                parents, or other caregivers;
                    (B) demonstrates measurable outcomes in improving 
                reading comprehension, phonemic awareness, vocabulary 
                acquisition, early language development, fluency, or 
                engagement with reading;
                    (C) has been evaluated through a rigorous study, 
                such as randomized control trials, quasi-experiential 
                designs, or longitudinal research, and shows 
                statistically significant positive effects on literacy 
                outcomes for the target population; and
                    (D) includes components for adult-child 
                interaction, culturally responsive instruction, or 
                family and caregiver engagement, where appropriate.
            (4) Family literacy.--The term ``family literacy'' means 
        services that are of sufficient intensity in terms of hours, 
        and of sufficient duration, to make sustainable changes in a 
        family, and that integrate all of the following activities:
                    (A) Interactive literacy activities between parents 
                and their children.
                    (B) Training for parents regarding how to be the 
                primary teacher for their children and full partners in 
                the education of their children.
                    (C) Parent literacy training that leads to economic 
                self-sufficiency and financial literacy.
                    (D) A developmentally-appropriate education to 
                prepare children for success in school and life 
                experiences.
            (5) Qualified applicant.--The term ``qualified applicant'' 
        means a State government, Tribal government, local government, 
        State educational agency, State humanities council, State 
        service commission, public library, local educational agency, 
        public school, juvenile justice facility, community-based 
        organization, nonprofit organization, or a consortium of such 
        entities, that works with children and has a demonstrated 
        record of promoting literacy for infants, toddlers, children, 
        and young adults for not less than 1 year.
            (6) Qualified literacy materials.--The term ``qualified 
        literacy materials''--
                    (A) means any developmentally-appropriate, 
                culturally relevant, and accessible print or digital 
                content--
                            (i) designed to support literacy 
                        development in infants, toddlers, children, or 
                        young adults; and
                            (ii) which may be provided in English or 
                        any other language; and
                    (B) may include--
                            (i) storybooks, chapter books, graphic 
                        novels, and picture books;
                            (ii) multi-lingual and dual-language 
                        materials;
                            (iii) books in accessible formats, such as 
                        braille and large print;
                            (iv) comics, newspapers, magazines, poetry, 
                        play scripts, and encyclopedias;
                            (v) educational brochures and printed media 
                        intended to support language acquisition, 
                        vocabulary building, and reading comprehension;
                            (vi) digital materials and e-books that can 
                        be accessible offline; and
                            (vii) reading-level-appropriate content 
                        reflecting diverse cultures, experiences, and 
                        voices.
            (7) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary 
        of Education.

SEC. 4. OPEN BOOKS, OPEN DOORS GRANT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary shall award grants, on a 
        competitive basis, to qualified applicants to help promote 
        child literacy.
            (2) Funding allocations.--The Secretary shall allocate 
        funds appropriated to carry out this Act for a fiscal year as 
        follows:
                    (A) Not less than 70 percent of the funds shall be 
                awarded as grants to qualified applicants located 
                within, or that coordinate or provide services to, 
                communities within book deserts and that collaborate 
                with--
                            (i) barbershops or salons;
                            (ii) houses of worship;
                            (iii) community centers;
                            (iv) childcare centers;
                            (v) Head Start or Early Head Start centers;
                            (vi) laundromats;
                            (vii) primary care providers, community 
                        health centers, health clinics, and urgent care 
                        centers;
                            (viii) a local entity providing services 
                        under the special supplemental nutrition 
                        program for women, infants, and children 
                        established under section 17 of the Child 
                        Nutrition Act of 1966 (42 U.S.C. 1786);
                            (ix) independent bookstores;
                            (x) youth-serving organizations;
                            (xi) direct mail programs;
                            (xii) family literacy programs; or
                            (xiii) other highly trafficked places, as 
                        designated by the Secretary.
                    (B) 15 percent of the funds shall be awarded as 
                grants to qualified applicants for early screening, 
                early intervention, and educator training related to 
                children with learning disabilities--
                            (i) which shall--
                                    (I) complement funding awarded 
                                under the Individuals with Disabilities 
                                Education Act (20 U.S.C. 1401 et seq.);
                                    (II) support programs that are 
                                developmentally-appropriate, non-
                                punitive, and followed by family 
                                communication and support, not 
                                identification alone; and
                                    (III) support programs that do not 
                                stigmatize or over-pathologize early 
                                readers; and
                            (ii) priority for which shall be to 
                        qualified applicants serving areas where the 
                        rate of reading disabilities or the rate of 
                        dyslexia screening or identification, is higher 
                        than the national average.
                    (C)(i) Not less than 8 percent of the funds shall 
                be awarded as grants to qualified applicants proposing 
                to develop, pilot, or scale promising strategies that 
                expand access to books, promote reading engagement, or 
                enhance literacy instruction and family literacy, of 
                which--
                            (I) not less than 25 percent shall be 
                        awarded to qualified applicants that are small 
                        entities or community-based organizations or 
                        pilot programs serving not more than 5,000 
                        children; and
                            (II) not less than 25 percent shall be 
                        awarded to qualified applicants that conduct 
                        family literacy programs;
                    (ii) Recipients of grants under clause (i) shall 
                participate in an evaluation process as determined by 
                the Secretary to assess effectiveness, scalability, and 
                alignment with the purpose of this Act.
                    (iii) The Secretary shall publish and disseminate 
                findings, toolkits, or case studies from strategies 
                developed, piloted, or scaled under this paragraph to 
                qualified applicants, State agencies, educators, and 
                the general public to encourage replication or 
                continuous improvement.
                    (D) Not more than 5 percent of the funds may be 
                used for technical assistance and capacity building, 
                including for regional hubs or intermediary nonprofit 
                organizations to provide coaching, help convene 
                grantees, or share best practices.
                    (E) Not more than 3 percent of the funds may be 
                used to support public engagement or awareness 
                campaigns, including supporting national or regional 
                campaigns to promote reading habits, funding public 
                service announcements, digital ads, or toolkits for 
                local partners, and conducting special campaigns for 
                reading in non-English languages or within immigrant or 
                refugee communities.
                    (F) Not more than 3 percent of the funds may be 
                used to support disaster-impacted areas, as defined by 
                the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
    (b) Applications.--A qualified applicant that desires to receive a 
grant under this Act shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
such a time, in such manner, and containing such information as the 
Secretary may require, including the following:
            (1) A description of the educational and financial need of 
        the community to be served by the qualified applicant.
            (2) A description of how the qualified applicant would 
        partner with local publishers, businesses, libraries, or other 
        stakeholders to raise additional funds to carry out grant 
        activities and increase book donations.
            (3) A description of how the qualified applicant would 
        conduct outreach to marginalized and underserved communities to 
        understand their literacy needs.
            (4) A sustainability plan for how the qualified applicant 
        will continue to promote child literacy after the grant period 
        ends.
            (5) A description on how the qualified applicant will, 
        where appropriate, partner with or procure qualified literacy 
        materials through local businesses as a way to support local 
        economies.
            (6) A description of how the qualified applicant will 
        deliver, or collaborate with partners already engaged in, 
        evidence-based literacy programs.
    (c) Grant Activities.--
            (1) In general.--A qualified applicant that receives a 
        grant under this Act shall use the grant funds for at least one 
        of the following:
                    (A) Purchasing or renting property to construct and 
                maintain distribution facilities for qualified literacy 
                materials.
                    (B) Establishing new literacy centers, book-
                exchange boxes, neighborhood libraries, mobile 
                libraries, and book banks.
                    (C) Purchasing and transporting qualified literacy 
                materials or hosting book drives.
                    (D) Conducting in person programs and utilizing 
                digital and online tools that promote literacy, adult 
                engagement, and reading comprehension.
                    (E) Eliminating or waiving late fees at public and 
                school-based libraries.
                    (F) Facilitating community or cultural events that 
                promote literacy and family literacy.
                    (G) Implementing universal early screening and 
                diagnostic or identification tools for learning 
                disabilities, such as dyslexia, including training for 
                staff on identifying and supporting students with 
                reading disabilities.
                    (H) Purchasing screening tools and providing 
                follow-up assessments and referrals in collaboration 
                with local educational agencies or community health 
                providers.
                    (I) Hiring, paying, and training (including 
                coaching) educators, volunteers, health care 
                professionals, caretakers, and parents in evidence-
                based literacy programs.
                    (J) Providing meals or transportation services for 
                individuals receiving services in any of the activities 
                described in this subsection.
            (2) Administrative cap.--
                    (A) Nonpublic entity.--A qualified applicant that 
                is a non public entity and receives a grant under this 
                Act may use not more than 25 percent of the grant funds 
                on operating expenses, including salaries, utilities, 
                equipment, and supplies, unless the Secretary approves 
                a waiver of such cap.
                    (B) Public entity.--A qualified applicant that is a 
                public entity and receives a grant under this Act may 
                use not more than 25 percent of the grant funds on 
                operating expenses, including salaries, utilities, 
                equipment, and supplies, unless the Secretary approves 
                a waiver of such cap.
    (d) Maintenance of Effort.--A qualified applicant may receive grant 
funds for a fiscal year only if the Secretary finds that the 
expenditures of the qualified applicant on literacy efforts for the 
preceding fiscal year were not less than the expenditures of the 
qualified applicant on literacy efforts for the second preceding fiscal 
year.
    (e) Matching Requirements.--
            (1) In general.--Each qualified applicant that receives a 
        grant under this Act shall provide, from non-Federal sources, 
        an amount equal to 25 percent of the amount of the grant to 
        carry out activities supported by the grant.
            (2) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive the requirement under 
        paragraph (1) when determined appropriate by the Secretary.

SEC. 5. REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

    Not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of this Act, and 
annually thereafter, the Secretary shall submit to the Committee on 
Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions and the Committee on 
Appropriations of the Senate and the Committee on Education and 
Workforce and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of 
Representatives, a report containing the following information for each 
grantee:
            (1) A breakdown of the number of students served through 
        grant activities and relevant demographics (including 
        socioeconomic status, race, age, and disability status) in each 
        grade that is participating in the program carried out with 
        grant funds.
            (2) State assessment data or other validated literacy 
        engagement scales, on a biannual basis, for local educational 
        agencies that receive support under the grant.
            (3) Survey responses from teachers and parents measuring 
        the impact increased access to books is having on children's 
        reading enthusiasm and confidence.
            (4) The number of books per child before and after the 
        program carried out with grant funds and the number of 
        caregivers participating in the program.

SEC. 6. INTERAGENCY COLLABORATION.

    (a) In General.--To ensure implementation and maximize the impact 
of the grant program established under this Act, the Secretary shall 
coordinate with relevant Federal agencies, including--
            (1) the Corporation for National and Community Services;
            (2) the Food and Nutrition Service of the Department of 
        Agriculture;
            (3) the Department of Health and Human Services, including 
        the Health Resources and Services Administration, the Maternal 
        and Child Health Bureau, and the Office of Head Start;
            (4) the Department of Housing and Urban Affairs;
            (5) the Department of Labor;
            (6) the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency 
        Prevention of the Department of Justice;
            (7) the Federal Communications Commission;
            (8) the Institute of Museum and Library Services; and
            (9) the National Endowment for the Humanities.
    (b) Activities.--The coordination required under subsection (a) 
shall include--
            (1) aligning literacy efforts with existing Federal early 
        childhood, education, health, and community development 
        programs;
            (2) sharing data and best practices to identify geographic 
        areas of greatest need;
            (3) ensuring consistent messaging and outreach to families 
        across federally supported platforms;
            (4) encouraging joint applications and cross-sector 
        partnerships among grantees supported by multiple agencies; and
            (5) identifying opportunities for co-location or 
        integration of literacy services in federally supported 
        housing, health, education, and nutrition programs.
    (c) Interagency Working Group.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall establish an 
        interagency working group to support implementation of this 
        Act.
            (2) Meeting frequency.--The working group shall meet not 
        less often than twice annually.
            (3) Report and national strategy.--The working group 
        shall--
                    (A) submit an interagency coordination report to 
                Congress every 2 years outlining shared initiatives, 
                challenges, and recommendations to strengthen Federal 
                literacy programming; and
                    (B) create and develop a national strategy to 
                promote literacy among young children from birth to age 
                5, school-aged children from kindergarten to 12th 
                grade, and young adults.

SEC. 7. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION.

    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to authorize the Secretary 
to ban or censor materials or otherwise influence local curricular or 
content decisions based on political or viewpoint grounds.

SEC. 8. FEDERAL CLEARINGHOUSE ON BOOK ACCESS.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary, in coordination with each of the 
Federal agencies listed in section 6(a), shall establish a Federal 
Clearinghouse on Book Access that shall--
            (1) identify, collect, and evaluate evidence-based 
        strategies, programs, and interventions that have been shown to 
        have a significant effect on children accessing qualified 
        literacy materials and improving literacy outcomes for children 
        and families living in book deserts; and
            (2) provide guidance, toolkits, and technical resources to 
        States, local educational agencies, health professionals, 
        libraries, and nonprofit organizations seeking to expand book 
        access in book deserts.
    (b) Information To Include.--The Federal Clearinghouse on Book 
Access shall ensure the guidance, toolkits, and technical resources 
provided under subsection (a) include, to the extent practicable, the 
following information:
            (1) The strength of the evidence that the guidance, 
        toolkit, or technical resource expands book access and 
        increases literacy outcomes.
            (2) The populations that were served in the programs that 
        are the bases for the guidance, toolkit, or technical resource, 
        along with where the populations are located, such as urban, 
        suburban, or rural areas.
            (3) Implementation models for the programs described in 
        paragraph (2), such as whether the programs were school-based, 
        library-based, health care-based, or community-based 
        approaches.
            (4) Cost considerations of implementation.
            (5) Demonstrated literacy outcomes in the programs 
        described in paragraph (2).
            (6) Findings and data from previous Federal or State 
        commissions recommending improvements to book access and 
        increasing literacy outcomes.
            (7) Other supportive evidence or findings relied upon by 
        the Clearinghouse, in consultation with Federal agencies listed 
        in section 6(a), in identifying evidence-based strategies, 
        programs, and interventions, as described in subsection (a)(1).
    (c) Consistency With Civil Rights.--The guidance, toolkits, and 
technical resources provided by the Clearinghouse shall be consistent 
with Federal civil rights laws, including title II of the Americans 
with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12131 et seq.), the 
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 701 et seq.), and title VI of the 
Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d et seq.).
    (d) Consultation.--In identifying the evidence-based strategies, 
programs, and interventions for the Federal Clearinghouse on Book 
Access, the Secretary shall consult with--
            (1) literacy researchers and experts; and
            (2) State educational agencies, local educational agencies, 
        early childhood education providers, community-based and 
        nonprofit literacy groups focused on book access and literacy 
        development, libraries, health providers, educators, and school 
        administrators.
    (e) Administration.--
            (1) In general.--The Federal Clearinghouse on Book Access 
        shall be assigned such personnel and resources as the Secretary 
        considers appropriate to carry out this section.
            (2) Detail.--The heads of each of the Federal agencies 
        listed in section 6(a) may detail personnel to the Federal 
        Clearinghouse on Book Access.
    (f) Production and Publication of Materials.--The Secretary may 
produce and publish materials identified, collected, and evaluated by 
the Federal Clearinghouse on Book Access to assist and train early 
childhood, educational, health care, law enforcement, and workforce 
agencies on the implementation of the evidence-based strategies, 
programs, and interventions for literacy development and enhancing 
access to books.
    (g) Collection of Data, Feedback, and Evaluations.--For the purpose 
of continuous improvement of the Federal Clearinghouse on Book Access, 
the Secretary shall collect--
            (1) Clearinghouse data analytics;
            (2) user feedback on the implementation of evidence-based 
        strategies, programs, and interventions identified by the 
        Clearinghouse; and
            (3) any evaluations conducted on implementation of the 
        evidence-based strategies, programs, and interventions.
    (h) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to require State educational agencies or local educational 
agencies to adopt the evidence-based strategies, programs, and 
interventions identified pursuant to subsection (a).

SEC. 9. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    (a) In General.--There is authorized to be appropriated to carry 
out this Act $100,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2031.
    (b) Supplemental Appropriations.--The Secretary may request 
supplemental appropriations based on demand for literacy services.
                                 <all>