Business, Community Leaders Call for More Pre-K Funds

A group of more than 60 prominent leaders from the business, education, early childhood civic, medical, legal, philanthropic, military, and child advocacy communities today called on state lawmakers to support Alabama Governor Kay Ivey’s push for a $24.4 million expansion of Alabama’s high-quality, voluntary First Class Pre-K program.

If approved by the state legislature, the proposed funding increase would add at least 207 new classrooms next year and help enroll at least 3,726 additional four-year-olds.

The Alabama School Readiness Alliance’s Pre-K Task Force included its support for Governor Ivey’s budget request in its 2021 Legislative Recommendations. The Task Force released its plan in a webinar with advocates from across the state. Click here to watch the video from today’s presentation.

“The ASRA Pre-K Task Force was formed in 2012 to build bipartisan support for expanding early childhood education,” said Mike Luce and Bob Powers, business leaders and co-chairs of the Alabama School Readiness Alliance Pre-K Task Force. “There is no question that the COVID pandemic has slowed pre-k expansion efforts. However, the COVID pandemic also affirmed how vital schools, pre-k, and high-quality child care are to helping families participate in the workforce and keep our economy open. We are grateful that Governor Ivey continues to see the importance of expanding early childhood education to support our state’s short- and long-term workforce needs. We encourage legislators to invest more in First Class Pre-K so that more families can take part.”

In addition to increased funding, the Task Force proposed a series of recommendations to maintain the First Class Pre-K program’s benchmarks for quality and accountability. For 14 years in a row, the National Institute for Early Education Research has ranked Alabama’s pre-k program as the number one state-funded pre-kindergarten program in the country for quality. Research by the Public Affairs Research Council of Alabama and the University of Alabama at Birmingham has found that students who participate in a First Class Pre-K classroom – regardless of demographics, zip code, or school – are more likely to be proficient in math and reading than their peers.

This year, the Task Force is also encouraging state lawmakers to support investments in child care quality. Investing in the child care infrastructure in Alabama will help prepare children for pre-k while also supporting a diverse system of quality providers for future First Class Pre-K expansion.

The Pre-K Task Force’s Recommendations are available in their entirety at https://www.alabamaschoolreadiness.org/2021-Pre-K-Task-Force-Recommendations/.

 

Longleaf Strategies advises on communications strategy, leads media outreach, develops messaging, and produces collateral materials for the Alabama School Readiness Alliance.