Head Start Child Care Funds Stop For Some Wisconsin Providers, Leaving Them Hanging
Wisconsin has '39 Head Start child care providers serving 16,000 children and employing about 4,500 staff across the state.'
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More than half a dozen child care centers that serve low-income families through the federal Head Start program have been waiting for more than a week to be repaid for expenses they鈥檝e already incurred for payroll, supplies and food for the children in their care.
Head Start and Early Head Start are federally funded programs that provide early education and child care to children from low-income families. Wisconsin has 39 Head Start child care providers serving 16,000 children across the state and employing about 4,500 staff, said Jenny Mauer, executive director of the Wisconsin Head Start Association.
鈥淭he chaos and uncertainty have been deeply earth-shattering,鈥 Mauer told the Wisconsin Examiner on Tuesday.
Mauer said providers across the state who receive federal grant payments for Head Start have seen delays in receiving their payments. She has been in touch with all 39 and, as of Tuesday, there were seven providers serving about 3,000 children that haven鈥檛 been paid by the federal government for at least a week, she said.
鈥淭his is going to get really serious if this doesn鈥檛 get resolved soon,鈥 Mauer said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not getting much in the way of answers. We鈥檙e not getting good explanations about anything. It鈥檚 incredibly frustrating.鈥
The Head Start payments stopped at the same time that a Trump administration memo announced a week ago that a broad array of federal grant and loan payments would be suspended. Two federal judges have ordered the White House to halt the suspension in payments, but there have been widespread reports of funds that have still not been released.
鈥淧eople think the freeze is over,鈥 said Rep. Andrew Hysell (D-Sun Prairie), whose district includes a child care provider affected and who posted a decrying the federal action. 鈥淵et these [federal] agencies are not providing the funds.鈥
The National Head Start Association, a membership organization for Head Start child care providers, has reported similar problems across the country.
鈥淲e鈥檙e definitely not alone, that鈥檚 for sure,鈥 Mauer said.
Reach Dane, a Madison child care agency that provides child care for about 1,000 children in Dane and Green counties, is waiting on $600,000 that the nonprofit is due from Head Start, said Jen Bailey, Reach Dane鈥檚 executive director. The organization had to tap into its bank line of credit after payments failed to come through in the last week.
The funds are needed to make payroll for Reach Dane鈥檚 staff of 250, including child care teachers, people in food service and bus drivers who pick up and drop off children in the program.
鈥淲e鈥檙e kind of flying blind in a chaos storm, trying to figure out what is happening and why,鈥 said Bailey, who is also president of the Wisconsin Head Start Association board.
Federal payments to Head Start programs are reimbursements for expenses providers have already incurred. Providers are accustomed to logging into a federal portal, submitting the expense information and receiving a reimbursement in about 24 hours.
Reach Dane typically submits its requests for payment once a week or so, Bailey said. A week ago Monday, Reach Dane was unable to log in to the portal at all, however.
Late Tuesday, Jan. 28, the portal was once again accessible, and Reach Dane submitted a payment request. A second payment request was submitted on Friday, Jan. 31.
鈥淲e have not received either of those,鈥 Bailey said Tuesday. 鈥淎s of right now both still show as pending in the system.鈥
In addition to serving Head Start children through its own child care centers, Reach Dane also works with private child care providers who enroll children from low-income families.
One private partner is The Playing Field, a nonprofit that operates two child care centers in Madison, one of them on the city鈥檚 West Side where the enrollment includes Head Start children. Reach Dane pays The Playing Field monthly to cover its Head Start kids.
Participating in Head Start is part of The Playing Field鈥檚 mission, said Abbi Kruse, who founded The Playing Field a decade ago with the goal of creating 鈥渁n early childhood education program that any family would choose for their child.鈥 From the start the organization鈥檚 model was to enroll children 鈥渇rom really different socio-economic and racial backgrounds,鈥 she said, overcoming segregation in all its forms.
At the West Side location, enrollment is about one-third children on scholarship, one-third children whose parents can afford the full cost, and one-third who are covered under Head Start or Early Head Start. 鈥淲ithout that funding, they could not attend our program,鈥 Kruse said. 鈥淲ithout that funding, we definitely could not sustain our model.鈥
Kruse said that Reach Dane sends a Head Start payment once a month to The Playing Field, which received the February payment on Monday. But if Reach Dane can鈥檛 resume receiving its federal funds, 鈥渙bviously that鈥檚 not sustainable for them to continue doing that,鈥 she said.
Some of the children served by her organization are from families living in shelters, sleeping in cars or hotels for the unhoused, for example, Kruse said. They may rely on The Playing Field not just for child care but for meals and other support, such as parenting classes.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of support for families in our model, and to rip that away from people is just cruel,鈥 Kruse said.
Mauer said that providers unable to collect the federal funds they鈥檙e due are scrambling to meet the shortfall.
The federal government requires that recipients must disburse the money they get within three days after collecting it. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not sitting on a set of federal reserves to pay people,鈥 Mauer said. 鈥淭his is money for service already rendered.鈥
Providers who are on the hook for funds 鈥渁re doing everything they can to keep their doors open,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e talking to creditors, they鈥檝e opened up lines of credit, they鈥檙e talking to community partners and moving things around.鈥
If Head Start providers don鈥檛 survive, the impact on employers could be severe.
鈥淭he majority of folks that come to Head Start are working families,鈥 Mauer said. Without child care, 鈥渢hat would mean those parents would have to make tough choices. It鈥檚 a terrible situation.鈥
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