AP: More Pre-K Programs Closing Amid Pennsylvania Budget Battle

AP: More Pre-K Programs Closing Amid Pennsylvania Budget Battle

AP: More Pre-K Programs Closing Amid Pennsylvania Budget Battle

By Associated Press December 2, 2015

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) – With budget talks dragging on in the Pennsylvania capitol, more early childhood centers certified under Pennsylvania’s state-subsidized pre-kindergarten program are closing without state aid.

The Pennsylvania Department of Education said Wednesday that 15 Pre-K Counts programs have closed. It says 538 children were enrolled in the programs.

This year’s prolonged budget impasse has entered its sixth month, forcing school districts, counties and social and human services organizations to shutter services, lay off employees, put off bills or go into debt to survive.

Children from low-income families qualify for Pre-K Counts, which serves nearly 14,000 children. Other Pre-K Counts providers are laying off staff or asking them to work for free.

Read more here.

AP: More Pre-K Programs Closing Amid Pennsylvania Budget Battle

Lancaster Online: State Budget Impasse: How are Pennsylvania’s Littlest Learners Being Affected?

Lancaster Online: State Budget Impasse: How are Pennsylvania’s Littlest Learners Being Affected?

By Kara Newhouse November 23, 2015

By the Numbers

Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts and the Head Start Supplemental Assistance Program allow preschools to open spots for children from low-income families. Funding for both programs has been on hold during the state budget impasse.

Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts

Children served in Lancaster County: 352
2014-15 funding to Lancaster County: $2.5 million
2014-15 total state funding: $97 million
Wolf’s 2015-16 proposal: $197 million
Head Start Supplemental Assistance Program

Children served in Lancaster County: 15
2014-15 funding to Lancaster County: $146,000
2014-15 total state funding: $39 million
Wolf’s 2015-16 proposal: $59 million

As owner of Little People Daycare School in Columbia, Sam Bhattacharya is responsible for the paychecks of 16 employees.

But in recent months, he’s missed a few — his own.

Bhattacharya has skipped paying himself and also taken loans to keep the center open during the state budget impasse, according to school director Laura Hess.

If lawmakers don’t pass a budget by January, Little People Daycare School will have to eliminate 20 full-day pre-kindergarten spots, Hess said.

The center is one of many across the state and within Lancaster County that are trying to stretch limited dollars as state funding for early-childhood education is held up by the budget stalemate.

Pennsylvania’s budget has been delayed more than four months.

Funds on hold

One of the main early-learning programs affected by the budget impasse is Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts, the state’s free pre-kindergarten program for low-income families. Last year, the program got $97 million, with $2.5 million going to Lancaster County.

At Little People Daycare School, 20 of the 75 enrolled children are supported by Pre-K Counts funding. Those are the ones who would be dropped if a budget doesn’t come through by January.

Pre-K Counts classes in Lancaster city are in a slightly better position. The School District of Lancaster receives Pre-K Counts funding for 233 children and works with five partner organizations to provide those classes. The district has been floating funds from elsewhere in its budget to keep pre-kindergarten classrooms open during the impasse, according to a district official.

That’s helped pay staff, said Lucy Stauffer, director of children and family services for Lancaster Recreation Commission, which is one of the district’s partners. The Rec Commission has 40 Pre-K Counts slots in its early childhood centers.

Though they’re receiving the district funds, the program is still feeling the squeeze. Stauffer said the budget impasse also has held up Keystone Stars grants — a state funding source that’s used for stocking classrooms.

That has prevented Stauffer from purchasing supplies “beyond the bare minimum.”

She has replenished cleaning products and safety items, as well as markers and crayons. But science and math materials that cost a little extra?

Those had to wait.

So did gardening equipment.

“We’re going to miss out on being able to plant for the fall the stuff that will come up in spring,” Stauffer said.

Read the full article here.

AP: More Pre-K Programs Closing Amid Pennsylvania Budget Battle

Beaver County Times: Budget impasse creates funding challenges for child care providers

Beaver County Times: Budget impasse creates funding challenges for child care providers

By Katherine Schaeffer

When Bridgette Medva drops off her children, ages 2 and 3, at Beaver’s Kiddie Korner Child Development Center before work, Pennsylvania’s budget impasse isn’t usually at the front of her mind.

But lately, Medva — a working single mom who qualifies for reduced-price child care through the state’s Child Care Works program — says she wonders what might happen if the Legislature doesn’t come to an agreement, potentially halting those subsidies, soon.

“It’s not an option to take them out of day care,” she said, adding that the private rate for both children would total more than a house payment. “I have no family able to watch them.”

Pennsylvania’s state budget has been in limbo for more than four months, leaving private child care providers who rely on state subsidies and grants to fend for themselves, said Kate Phillips, spokeswoman for the nonprofit Pre-K for PA coalition. In the worst cases, providers reduced staff pay or shut their doors completely, she said.

“These centers are counting on dollars that flow from the state, and all of them have gone without that since June,” Phillips said.

In Beaver County, child care providers say they haven’t had to make drastic cuts, but without expected grant money and other subsidies, finances are tight.

In Beaver County, 206 children are enrolled in federally funded pre-kindergarten and Head Start programs, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Education. Private child care providers receive state reimbursements through Child Care Works, a subsidy program for low-income families, and can also apply for merit-based grants through state initiatives like Keystone Stars, which incentivizes providers to improve staff training and curriculum.

At Just Like Home Daycare Center and Preschools, which has four locations in Center, Vanport, Hopewell and Chippewa townships, the Child Care Works subsidies, disbursed through Beaver County’s Child Care Information Services office, are still coming in, co-owner Richard Pavlinch said. But state grocery reimbursements for kids qualifying for free or reduced-price lunch stopped a few months ago, creating challenges, he said.

Just Like Home, which serves children from 6 weeks old to about sixth grade, provides formula for infants and breakfast, lunch and an afternoon snack for older children, Pavlinch said.

“It adds up, especially when you have four sites and you need to buy fresh things like fruits, vegetables and dairy,” Pavlinch said.

Meals still have to comply with state regulations, and Pavlinch’s four site directors are tasked with putting together nutritious meals on a much lower budget, he said.

Hardworking staff at all four centers still provide children with quality daily care, but right now, the center is focusing on purchasing just the essentials, he said.

“It’s not like this is a restaurant business, where you can raise the price of a meal to offset the cost,” Pavlinch said.

Beaver’s Kiddie Korner hasn’t made any drastic cuts, but without promised state grant and merit-based award money, planning improvements has been a challenge, site director Kelly Battaglia said.

About 30 percent of Kiddie Korner’s families qualify for state subsidized child care, but the grant money they usually receive from Keystone Stars hasn’t come in, she said.

Battaglia said she had planned to phase in new curriculum, purchase gross motor activities and install sinks in every classroom, but she’s had to hold off until the grants are disbursed.

“The children aren’t stopping,” Battaglia said. “They’re growing and developing, and we can’t say, ‘Just hold off until they pass a budget.’”

Robin Moye, center director for Noah’s Ark, which has locations in Chippewa and Beaver Falls, said maintaining services has only been a minor hiccup, but she’s had to make sacrifices in order to continue with planned improvements, putting renovations to the Chippewa facility’s two school-age rooms on her personal credit cards.

Read the full article here.

 

AP: More Pre-K Programs Closing Amid Pennsylvania Budget Battle

PennLive: As Budget Framework Emerges, Preschool Advocates Fear They’ll be Squeezed Out: Analysis

PennLive: As Budget Framework Emerges, Preschool Advocates Fear They’ll be Squeezed Out: Analysis

By John L Micek

Gov. Tom Wolf and legislative Republicans may be working out the fine print details of a nascent state budget framework, but advocates for early childhood education programs already fear the state’s youngest residents could get squeezed out of a final deal.

“If there is one clear way to spend state money and know you are making a real difference, it’s on Pre-k,” said David L. Cohen, the Comcast executive who’s part of a coalition pushing for the increased funding.

And even though a final agreement on a spending plan that’s now five months late is still a week or two away, at minimum, Cohen and his allies have been working the phones and prowling the Capitol, urging budget negotiators to give the programs a serious cash bump.

How much?

Here’s the debate, by the numbers:

During his budget rollout in March, Wolf asked lawmakers to authorize $120 million for both prekindergarten and Head Start programs. The budget plan the Senate approved back in June included $30 million for the two expenditures.

The two sides clashed earlier this week over how much early childhood education funding was included in the emerging framework. The administration claimed $50 million, which Senate GOP leaders disputed vigorously.

Right now, as is the case with most of the budgetary fine print, the total tally is a moving target, those close to the negotiations said.

So why does the number matter?

It’s all about access.

According to data compiled by the Pennsylvania Office of Early Childhood Development, nearly 17,000 students are on a waiting list for those programs statewide.

Advocates say the $120 million sought by Wolf would pay for 14,000 children, while $60 million would pay for 7,000 children. The $30 million included in the Republican-authored budget that Wolf vetoed in June would pay for just 3,500 students. They say that’s unacceptable.

And viewed in that context, the drumbeat advocates were sounding in the Capitol this week makes sense.

It’s a budget season truism that those who squawk the loudest tend to be heard, and, as a result, have their programs funded (sort-of) close to what they’re looking for in the final document.

But as one veteran budgeteer pointed out this week, most everything in the framework is still a moving target, and while entirely fretting is appropriate, it might be a tad premature.

That’s particularly true in the case of early childhood education, which just about everyone in the Capitol thinks is a good idea and which experts agree is critical for future school success.

The benefits are quantifiable and indisputable – and the agreed-upon need is truly bipartisan,” Cohen said. “Unfortunately, far too many kids in our commonwealth are still not able to get into really good pre-k programs. The fix for this is within reach and is affordable.”

It’s also important to note here that one of the most vocal advocates for these programs is Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Pat Browne, R-Lehigh, who has never been accused of being a European Socialist.

As ever, the debate comes down to how much, not whether, to spend money. And based on public statements by the Wolf administration and the GOP, that’s where things are at the moment.

Wolf’s spokesman Jeffrey Sheridan said Thursday that “investing in early childhood education is a huge priority,” for Wolf, who is still “fighting for at least $50 million in increased funding for this year. It is unclear why Republicans are so resistant to this additional funding.”

Read the full article here.

AP: More Pre-K Programs Closing Amid Pennsylvania Budget Battle

The Notebook: Pa. budget framework supports major funding boost for public schools

The Notebook: Pa. budget framework supports major funding boost for public schools

By Kevin McCorry

Sources in the Pennsylvania Capitol say that the framework reached Monday for a state budget agreement includes a $400 million increase to K-12 public education this year.

While $350 million would be funneled into the basic education subsidy, an additional $50 million would go to special education. Pre-K programming would also see a boost, but sources differed on the amounts.

The state’s budget for higher education would increase by 5 percent.

“This is the first time that we feel like we’re moving ahead, and everyone is on the same track — as opposed to having a solid deal or anything final,” said Jenn Kocher, spokeswoman for Senate Republicans. “Nothing is agreed to until everything is agreed to.”

Gov. Wolf’s administration would not comment on any specifics. Spokesman Jeff Sheridan confirmed, though, that negotiations have progressed.

“We believe that there is light at the end of the tunnel,” he said.

A source close to the Wolf administration said that a framework had been reached for the 2016-17 school year as well. Under that scenario, $200 million more would be added to basic education, and special education and pre-K would each get an additional $50 million.

Neither Kocher nor a spokesman for House Republicans could verify those proposals.

Budget negotiations have dragged on for months after the June 30 deadline. Wolf, a Democrat, has prioritized a drastic increase in state education aid, as Republican leaders have balked at the package of tax increases that Wolf proposed to pay for it.

Read the rest of the article here.

 

AP: More Pre-K Programs Closing Amid Pennsylvania Budget Battle

Philly.com: Possible breakthrough in Pa.’s budget stalemate?

Philly.com: Possible breakthrough in Pa.’s budget stalemate?

Chris Palmer and Angela Couloumbis

HARRISBURG – For the first time in their five-month-old standoff, Gov. Wolf and Republican legislators indicated Monday that they had reached a tentative agreement on key pieces of the long-overdue state budget.

Republican leaders in the Senate and House told reporters that a $30.26 billion spending plan would likely boost education funding, use a sales-tax hike to generate property-tax relief, and bring changes to the public pension and State Store systems.

“After months of obstruction, we’ve made real progress on a budget deal,” Wolf said in a Monday evening email to his campaign supporters. “For the first time, I’m optimistic we can see the light at the end of the tunnel.”

Both sides cautioned that many details remained unresolved – and there seemed to be disagreement about the scope of the pact. It also was poised to address contentious legislative topics that have lingered in the Capitol for years.

“We’re not done by any stretch,” said Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman (R., Centre).

Neither side would discuss how or when they reached a breakthrough, when a budget proposal might be ready for legislators to consider, or how soon the money would flow again to the schools, offices, and agencies that have struggled to remain afloat without state aid for months. Several predicted an agreement by Thanksgiving.

But the framework they disclosed suggested victories for both Wolf and the Republican-controlled legislature – as well as some concessions.

The governor, for example, would secure the boost in education funding that he has made a centerpiece of his budget, but abandon his plan to impose a new tax on natural gas drilling.

Republicans would win their battle to privatize aspects of liquor stores and enact reforms to the pension system, issues they have spent years pushing. But the GOP leaders who have uniformly opposed broad-based tax increases would have to approve one in the sales tax – even though an offset would occur in property taxes.

Bill Patton, spokesman for House Democrats, noted that any final deal was likely to include pluses and minuses for both sides.

“That’s compromise,” he said.

The deal would call for raising the state sales tax from 6 percent to 7.25 percent, Corman said. That would create about $2 billion in new revenue, which could cover a major property tax reduction and permit the state to increase basic education funding by $350 million in the current fiscal year. Special education would receive an additional $50 million in funding as well, Corman said.

Wolf’s spokesman, Jeff Sheridan, said Republican leaders had agreed to a larger education package: an additional $50 million more for prekindergarten this year, as well as $300 million combined for basic education, special education, and prekindergarten next year.

Corman, however, said the focus was on this year alone.

Read the full article here.