Allegheny Intermediate Unit

{{short description|School district in Pennsylvania}}

{{Use American English|date=February 2025}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}

{{Infobox school

| name =

| latin_name =

| logo = AIU3color.jpg

| image =

| alt = AIU logo

| streetaddress = 475 East Waterfront Drive

| city = Homestead

| county = Allegheny County

| state = Pennsylvania

| zipcode = 15120

| type = Intermediate Unit

| established = 1971

| employees = 1,200

| information = Located at more than 300 sites throughout Allegheny County

| website = http://www.aiu3.net

412-394-5700

}}The Allegheny Intermediate Unit (AIU) is a branch of the Pennsylvania Department of Education, and is the largest of the 29 intermediate units in Pennsylvania. It was created by the state’s General Assembly in 1971, and is headquartered in Homestead.

The AIU provides specialized education services to 42 suburban public school districts and five career and technical centers in Allegheny County. The agency, which has about 1,200 employees at nearly 300 sites throughout the county, also operates 10 family centers and three schools for exceptional children. Funded by federal, state, county and private grants, the AIU coordinates more than 130 programs designed to help infants, young children, students and adults. In 2024, the programs offered by the AIU served more than 113,000 students in public schools.

Leadership and governance

File:AIU Headquarters.jpg

The AIU's board of directors has 13 members, elected from Allegheny County's 42 suburban public school districts. [https://www.post-gazette.com/news/education/2020/02/25/AIU-selects-new-executive-director-robert-scherrer-allegheny-intermediate-unit-pittsburgh/stories/202002250106?cid=search Dr. Robert Scherrer] is the agency's executive director.

Public school districts served

Career and technology centers served

The role of intermediate units

Pennsylvania’s intermediate units were created in 1971 in an effort to help school districts operate more efficiently and meet the specialized needs of their students. Since then, these education agencies have evolved into an important resource on which school districts rely.

School districts and intermediate units are separate legal entities. Intermediate units have no legal jurisdiction over school districts and do not control school districts. On the contrary, intermediate units exist to serve school districts and provide leadership which will improve local operations. Although intermediate units are an extension of the Pennsylvania Department of Education, they differ greatly from local school districts in several ways.

class="wikitable"

!School Districts

!Intermediate Units

Gain revenue from local real estate taxes

|Have no taxing powers

Can own property for a variety of uses

|Can own property for office use only

Have one yearly budget which is adopted based on approval of its local board

|Have several budgets, all of which must be passed by its local board. IUs receive funding for individual programs and these funds cannot be co-mingled. In addition, IUs develop a yearly Program of Services Budget which requires approval from a majority of its member school districts

Serve students in a predetermined geographic area

|Serve a very diverse population of students who often reside beyond IU boundaries

References