Education will get some of that. But because it's not an ongoing revenue stream, they'll be hesitant to put the money towards ongoing costs. Instead they'll use it to purchase some training or a new program (a one-time cost). What we really need is the ongoing funds to cover these types of things.
Unfortunately, underfunding education has become the status quo (at least in Utah). We're used to teachers making low salaries - so much so that fewer college students are choosing teaching as a career path. I'm curious to see if the teacher shortage will disrupt the current economics of education.