CBS 21: Gov. Wolf Pushes for More Education Funding

CBS 21: Gov. Wolf Pushes for More Education Funding

CBS 21: Gov. Wolf Pushes for More Education Funding
May 8, 2017

Governor Wolf spoke out about early childhood education and his commitment to high-quality education in the Commonwealth.

The governor says he is proposing an additional $209-million dollars in education funding.

The investments would be put towards a number of programs.

The budget proposal also includes a nearly $8-million dollar increase for the 14 state owned universities.

Today Governor Wolf was also presented with the 2017 Pre-K Champion Award.

See the article and video here.

CBS 21: Gov. Wolf Pushes for More Education Funding

PennLive: Pa.’s investment in preschool lags behind other states, study shows

PennLive: Pa.’s investment in preschool lags behind other states, study shows
May 8, 2017 by Jan Murphy

Advocates pushing for an increase in state funding for preschool programs in the 2017-18 state budget released a study on Monday that shows Pennsylvania’s investment in pre-K programs is lagging behind other states.

It shows 19 states and the District of Columbia have a higher per-capita investment in high-quality preschool programs than Pennsylvania, which invests $682.17 per child, according to the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University. Fifteen states invest more than $1,000 per child including economic competitors New Jersey and New York.

What’s more, Joan Benso, president of Pennsylvania Partnerships for Children, said, “Sixty-four percent, two-thirds basically, of Pennsylvania 3- and 4-year-olds who are eligible for high-quality pre-k still don’t get the opportunity to attend. Why? Because we don’t invest enough state money.”

Her organization along with the Pre-K for PA campaign are calling on lawmakers to support Gov. Tom Wolf’s proposed $75 million increase for Pre-K Counts and Head Start, and not the $25 million one included in the House-passed Republican budget.

The proposed $75 million increase would up the state’s investment in preschool to $271.5 million and open up 8,400 more slots for children to access high-quality preschool programs.

At a Capitol news conference where she was joined by Gov. Tom Wolf along with other officials, Benso said she recognizes this is a big investment in a difficult budget year but reminded lawmakers, “our preschool children don’t have time to wait ’til the budget gets better for us to make a bigger investment. They have once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to attend high-quality pre-k. They don’t get a do-over when the economy improves.”

Wolf said he became a believer in the importance of preschool before he became governor. His cabinet company contributed to United Way to set up early childhood programs in York. He said the private sector has a role to play but to scale it up to serve more children, it needs government help.

He said his $32.3 billion state budget proposal for next year cuts funding and squeezes out some savings to avoid a broad-based tax increase. However he said it also “increases investment in places that make a difference in the lives of Pennsylvanians. Early childhood education is one of those places.”

Cumberland County District Attorney David Freed, a Republican who often disagrees with the Democratic governor on criminal justice issues, said when it comes to preschool, they are on the same side.

Investing in preschool keeps kids in school and out of the criminal justice system, he said. Half of Pennsylvania’s prison population has less than a 12th grade education. With over 47,000 adult inmates, that costs taxpayers $2.3 billion a year to keep them incarcerated.

“If we keep people out of the system, we will save all sorts of money,” he said. “It’s hard to look ahead. It’s hard make an argument that we need to do things that will help us down the road. But the studies show – and the reason that you have so many law enforcement people involved in this fight is that the studies show that these programs work.”

Watch video here. Read the article here.

CBS 21: Gov. Wolf Pushes for More Education Funding

ABC 27: Gov. Wolf pushes for early childhood education funds

Gov. Wolf pushes for early childhood education funds

HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) – Gov. Tom Wolf called for increased funding for early childhood education during a news conference at the state Capitol on Monday.

Wolf’s 2017-2018 budget includes a $75 million increase for early childhood education. He says the nearly 40 percent increase will allow more than 8,400 additional children to enroll in Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts and the Head Start Supplemental Assistance Program.

He said early childhood education is one of the most effective interventions we can make in the lives of children.

“This is not something that is politically expedient, this is something that I really believe in, and I showed that when I personally contributed back in the early 90s and consistently through my period in the private sector for early childhood education,” Wolf said. “This really works.”

Wolf said it has been proven that children who participate in high-quality pre-k perform better in school later on.

CBS 21: Gov. Wolf Pushes for More Education Funding

Sharon Herald: Rep. Longietti Named a Pre-K Champion

Sharon Herald: Rep. Longietti Named a Pre-K Champion
April 22, 2017 by Joe Pinchot

SHARON – The numbers are stark.

In West Middlesex Area School District, 145 children are eligible for pre-kindergarten programs, but only 17 are enrolled, according to Pre-K for PA, a nonpartisan coalition lobbying for increased attention and funding for early childhood education.

In Mercer County, West Middlesex’s numbers are the norm. Other than the Hermitage and Farrell school districts, where all eligible students are enrolled in programs, more than half the 3- and 4-year-olds in every other county school district do not have access to an early education program.

As Pre-K for PA pushes to make Gov. Tom Wolf and state legislators make early education a priority, it has found a friend in state Rep. Mark Longietti, who serves the western portion of Mercer County.

Pre-K for PA honored Longietti on Friday with the Pre-K Champion Award, one of a handful of legislators so designated. These champions have “made this a priority issue,” said spokesman Kate Phillips.

“We need guys like Mark to push this forward,” she said.

Longietti is “the guy that (is) carrying the torch in Harrisburg on this issue,” said Ron DiNicola, co-chairman of the Northwest PA Leadership Council for Pre-K Counts, who presented the award to the Hermitage lawmaker.

“As I go around talking about pre-K myself, I’m always amazed at how impactful his contribution has been,” DiNicola said.

The award was handed out at Zion Education Center, the Sharon organization that has 30 children enrolled in its pre-kindergarten program, their enrollment fees paid totally or partly by a government organization.

“The parents in this community can’t afford to pay,” said Dr. April L. Torrence, who founded and operates the center, with Sharon school Superintendent Michael Calla adding that up to 70 percent of Sharon families are considered impoverished.

The lack of new funding is “very frustrating,” Torrence said.

“It is even more frustrating to know that we had a five-year gap before receiving grant funding to expand our classroom again,” she said. “It’s even more frustrating to know there are some parents that still have a portion of services that they have to pay for through co-payments, and they struggle with that. One of the hardest things that I have to do is cut off services because the parent has gotten behind in their co-payments.”

Children need to know their numbers and letters before they enter kindergarten, making pre-kindergarten programs critical to the long-term success of children in schools, said Jim Micsky, executive director of United Way of Mercer County, which runs the pre-kindergarten Success by Six program in the summer in 11 school districts.

“That’s where we set the groundwork for the future,” Micsky said of pre-kindergarten education.

 The benefits of early childhood education are legion, speakers said. Students who are exposed to structured educational activities at ages 3 and 4 have more success in school and college, have higher earning potential, are less reliant on public assistance and have fewer problems with drug and alcohol abuse and crime.

Randy Seitz, president of Penn-Northwest Development Corp., said there’s no better way to lift a family out of poverty than to give an individual a job, and Penn-Northwest has pushed for school districts to become more active in economic development efforts. With “mass retirements” expected in the next 10 to 15 years, today’s young people need to be properly trained to step into those jobs, Seitz said.

Longietti said the importance of education was taught to him by his father, Al, and his mother, Pearl Knott, who went back to college in her 30s and got an education degree. She taught elementary school in Sharpsville for 22 years.

“She was very good as a student, very hard-working and it just ingrained in us the importance of education and then her role as an elementary teacher really spoke to how important it is to touch kids early,” he said.

“I think, if there’s any investment we can make in state government, that this is the most important investment because children are our future, number one,” Longietti said. “Number two, all the peer-reviewed studies show that for every dollar that we put into early childhood ed, that we save between $7 and $17” in future services provided to individuals.

But, it’s hard to shake free new funding for early education programs.

“It’s always the same thing,” Longietti said. “We’re always piecing these budgets together, trying to scrape together the funds to get through another year. Too often, we don’t make the investment in our future that pays dividends down the road because we’re just trying to get by. This is an investment we can’t afford not to make. Other states are doing it, other countries are doing it, we need to do it here in Pennsylvania.”

Longietti said he accepted the Pre-K Champion award on behalf of “the kids that we have reached and made a difference for”; “the kids that we need to reach”; and “perhaps, most importantly, because my mother was an early educator, I accept it on behalf of the teachers, the folks that come here every day and teach and form young minds.”

See the full article here.

CBS 21: Gov. Wolf Pushes for More Education Funding

WXBN: Group Says Mercer County Kids Lack Access to Quality Early Education

WXBN: Group Says Mercer County Kids Lack Access to Quality Early Education
April 21, 2017 by Gerry Ricciutti

MERCER COUNTY, Pa. (WKBN) – One group says more funding is needed to ensure that all children have access to early-childhood education.

According to Pre-K for PA, 57 percent of the eligible 3- and 4-year-olds in Mercer County have no access to high-quality early education.

“That’s a pretty substantial number of children who are starting in kindergarten classrooms with very little in the way of learning the alphabet, their numbers or just their social skills,” said Jim Micsky, executive director of the United Way of Mercer County.

The group is asking for more funding from the state because not all families can afford to pay for such programs. Leaders are asking Governor Tom Wolf to provide an additional $75 million for early childhood education — enough to cover 8,400 more children across the state.

Dr. April Torrence, of the Zion Education Center, started working in early child development in 1995 when she started an in-home daycare operation. With 70 percent of the families in Sharon living in poverty, she said funding from the state to pay for programs like this is crucial.

“Because families in this community are poverty-stricken, they don’t have the resources to pay for high-quality child care, so to have the funding here in the community is a plus,” said Torrence.

She said Zion Education Center lost 95 percent of its state funding in 2011, forcing them to eliminate seven staff members and 25 pre-K slots. Zion now receives funding to pay for 15 children.

If Wolf’s budget proposal is approved, the additional money would allow the facility to enroll more students.

“We want to reach as many families as we can, especially within walking distance, to come to the facility and receive a high-quality education,” Torrence said.

Zion Education Center in Sharon is one of 19 certified high-quality pre-K education programs in Mercer County. Pre-K for PA said 31 more classrooms like that are needed for the kids with no other access.

Read the article and view the video here.