Waleed Shahid of Justice Democrats said on Twitter that the presidential candidate’s plan “seems like the most aggressive national anti-segregation policy” proposed in decades, while others noted how it comes in “stark contrast” to the past positions of former Vice President Joe Biden, who is also seeking the Democratic nomination for president.

Under Sanders’s plan, the federal government would spend $5 billion annually to expand access to summer and after-school programs, teen centers, and tutoring—and another $5 billion so community schools can “provide a holistic, full-service approach to learning and the well-being of our young people” through dental and mental health care, substance abuse prevention, community and youth organizing, job training classes, art spaces, GED, and ESL classes.

On the educator side, Sanders calls for increasing teacher pay “by working with states to set a starting salary for teachers at no less than $60,000 tied to cost of living, years of service, and other qualifications; and allowing states to go beyond that floor based on geographic cost of living.”

Sanders introduced his public education plan in a speech in South Carolina on Saturday. Watch:

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