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To the disappointment of many child care advocates, Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill Friday that would have set a timetable for providing state subsidized preschool for all low-income 4-year-olds.
Assembly Bill 47, authored by Assemblyman Kevin McCarty, D-Sacramento, would have set a target of June 2018 to provide access to state subsidized preschool to all low-income 4-year-olds who are not already enrolled in transitional kindergarten or state preschool. Whether that timetable would be met would have been contingent “upon the appropriation of sufficient funding in the annual Budget Act for this purpose.”
In his veto message, Brown said that the state already had indicated its intent in last year’s budget bill (SB 858) to “make preschool and other full day, full year early education and care opportunities available to all low-income children.” He said expanding state preschool “should be considered in the budget process, as it is every year.”
A bill that he said “sets an arbitrary deadline, contingent on a sufficient appropriation, is unnecessary.”
Early education advocates, however, wanted to firm up that commitment to provide more preschool spaces and lobbied heavily to accomplish that goal. While the bill did not have any funding attached, the bill would have given lawmakers a deadline, instead of a soft goal of eventually providing the slots.
Deborah Kong, president of Early Edge, said she was disappointed about the veto, saying it was a “missed opportunity.”
“We’re glad to see that the governor recognizes the promise made last year and look forward to engaging with his administration in the coming budget process,” Kong said in a statement. “There remains a significant unmet need for preschool in California, with tens of thousands of low-income children who do not have access to preschool. To them and their families, this is very necessary.”
McCarty, too, said he plans to again focus on expanding preschool access in the next budget.
“I’m disappointed in the Governor’s veto of AB 47, the Preschool for All Act of 2015,” McCarty said in a statement. “Quality early childhood education has been proven to help close the achievement gap, fight poverty, and prevent kids from entering the juvenile justice system.”
Between 32,000 and 35,000 low-income 4-year-olds lack access to state preschool, transitional kindergarten or federal Head Start programs. The cost estimates for the bill varied greatly, depending on how many children would have been placed in full-day vs. half-day programs, ranging from $147 million and $240 million.
Since the Legislature passed the bill Sept. 11, early education advocates, led by Early Edge, have heavily pushed for Brown to sign the bill. More than 40 organizations lent their support to the bill. McCarty held a rally at a Sacramento preschool and advocates led a Twitter storm to generate discussion about the need for the bill on social media.
Moira Kenney, executive director of the First 5 Association of California, wrote in an EdSource commentary that “early learning advocates will continue to work together to answer California’s families call for relief.” For now, she said, “we will take the governor at his word that the budget process will result in clear and continual progress towards the goal of full access.”
Over the last two years, the Legislature has added pre-kindergarten slots, but has so far fallen short in providing spaces for all low-income 4 year olds.
In 2014, then Senate President Pro-Tem Darrell Steinberg introduced a bill to expand transitional kindergarten to all 4-year-olds. But the Legislature instead added 11,500 additional child care slots. As part of the budget process, SB 858 declared that it was the intent of the state to eventually provide “quality preschool opportunities” for all low-income children whose parents wanted to enroll them. In 2015-16, the Legislature again added thousands of full-day and part-day child care slots when it approved its annual budget.
What is Already State Law
Budget trailer bill SB 858 (excerpted below) was signed by Gov. Brown on June 20, 2014:
It is the intent of the state to ensure a fair start to all low-income children by providing quality preschool opportunities for all low-income children whose families wish to enroll their children. It is further the intent of the state to provide all low-income 4-year-old children from working families with full-day, full-year early education and care.
What AB 47 Would Have Done
An excerpt from AB 47 states the following:
On or before June 30, 2018, all eligible children, pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8263, who are not enrolled in transitional kindergarten shall have access to the state preschool program the year before they enter kindergarten, if their parents wish to enroll them, contingent upon the appropriation of sufficient funding in the annual Budget Act for this purpose.
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Gary Ravani 9 years ago9 years ago
This situation points out some of the devolution the state budget process has undergone in recent times. The key fact that Assem. McCarty left any "appropriation," spending plan, to implement his proposed EC program, says a lot. The traditional and constitutional process for passing such a bill would have had the focus on the programmatic section of the bill passed in an appropriate committee, which would include debate and public comment, aka, transparency. Then the … Read More
This situation points out some of the devolution the state budget process has undergone in recent times. The key fact that Assem. McCarty left any “appropriation,” spending plan, to implement his proposed EC program, says a lot. The traditional and constitutional process for passing such a bill would have had the focus on the programmatic section of the bill passed in an appropriate committee, which would include debate and public comment, aka, transparency. Then the bill would be passed onto the Appropriations Committee where, again with transparency, the funding for the program would be taken under consideration with debate and public comment. Under the current procedures the Appropriations Committee(s) in both houses have become the “elephant’s graveyard” of bills. Appropriations no longer appropriates anything. Basically, if the bill has a funding aspect attached, it dies. Everything is done in the budget process, which is less transparent than the committee process, often completed by “The Big Five” (governor with majority and minority leaders in both houses) in private meetings, with little to none of the public debate or public input as had been the tradition in CA. One progressive State Senator, several years ago, held public meetings on the budget and subsequently lost important committee assignments and the chair. A warning to other advocates for a more public process, or so it appeared.