Financing
How Can Policymakers Finance Improving Third Grade Reading and Math Proficiency?
·
Maximize federal funds.
Target flexible block grant dollars to effective programs and infrastructure. Use allowable match sources (including state, local and private funding) to draw down all available federal dollars that have state matching requirements. Arkansas uses state pre-kindergarten funding to meet 20 percent (maximum allowed) of its matching requirement for Child Care and Development Funds (CCDF) funds.
[i]
·
Encourage local use of Title I funding.
Title I funding of the No Child Left Behind Act may be used for young children beginning at birth, at the discretion of local education agencies (LEAs).
California’s First 5 Commission
encouraged a 76 percent increase in use of Title I for early education through technical assistance and planning grants.
[ii]
·
Blend and braid funding.
Kansas
and
Maryland
fund inclusive preschool programs for children with and without disabilities by combining state funds with Federal Preschool Grants for Children with Disabilities, offered under Part B (Section 619) of
the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
[iii]
·
Supplement federal funds.
Kansas Early Head Start
uses $11 million (FY 2008) in state CCDBG quality set-aside dollars, general funds, and tobacco settlement dollars to expand Early Head Start programs. The program and partners with the federal ACF Region VII Office for monitoring and training and technical assistance to state grantees.
[iv]
·
Include Early Care and Education in the State School Funding Formula.
Wisconsin’s 4 Year Old Kindergarten
program is included in the school funding formula, but
local communities must raise one-third of their district’s pre-k funding through property taxes.[v]
·
Create Dedicated Revenue Streams.
Georgia uses state lottery revenue to fund its
universal prekindergarten program
($325 million in 2007-2008). Arizona voters passed a
referendum
to impose a tax on tobacco products that will generate an estimated $150 million a year for
First Things First
, a flexible funding source for local community investments in young children.
Colorado
set aside a percentage of
youth crime prevention funding
for early childhood programs.
·
Leverage private funding.
In 2006, the Nebraska Legislature passed, and the governor signed, a bill to establish the
Nebraska Birth to Three Early Childhood Education Endowment
with $40 million in public funds matched by $20 million from private philanthropic sources. Investment earnings are pooled to fund
grants to schools and community partners to provide programs and services for at-risk children from birth to age 3.
[ii]
Ewen, D. and Matthews, H. (2007, October).
Title I and Early Childhood Programs: A Look at Investments in the NCLB Era.
Retrieved January 9, 2009, from Child Care and Early Education Series, October 2007, No. 2. Washington, DC: Center for Law and Social Policy. Web site:
http://www.clasp.org/publications/ccee_paper2.pdf
[iv]
Schumacher, R. and DiLauro, E., (2008).
Building on the Promise: State Initiatives to Expand Access to Early Head Start for Young Children and their Families
. Retrieved January 9, 2009, from Washington, DC: Center for Law and Social Policy, ZERO TO THREE. Web site:
http://childcareandearlyed.clasp.org/state_ehs.html