Friday, May 24, 2013


     Legislative Session Ends With Huge WINS
          for Early Care and Education!

     Scroll down for link to Thank Governor Dayton
            and Legislative Leaders

You are invited to the next meeting of the

Early Childhood Directors Group

June 13th – 10:00 am – noon

2021 Hennepin Ave. E., Minneapolis  55413 

Join us for networking and learning with other center directors

June Discussion Topic:

A Journey in Reggio Emilia and Pistoia, Italy  

Ann Edgerton, Director of the University of  MN Child Development Center (UMCDC), will give a brief powerpoint presentation with photos of the early childhood environments she visited. Ann will also discuss the basic principles of the Italian Approach to early education in Reggio and Pistoia incorporated at UMCDC. 

The agenda for the June 13th meeting also includes a wrap up of child care legislation  and plans for the Early Childhood Directors Group “tour of quality centers” this summer.

There is no charge for this meeting. Questions? Contact Nancy Johnson at njohnson@thinksmall.org



 The Early Childhood Directors Group meets
 on the second Thursday - 10:00 am – noon
Think Small’s Minneapolis office
2021 Hennepin Ave. E., Suite 250, Mpls, 55413
 
Monthly networking meetings are FREE.
Quarterly trainings - $22 fee, 2 hours in-service  
 
To register and pre-pay for trainings contact Nancy Johnson
njohnson@thinksmall.org or 651-233-2260

Thank Governor Dayton and Legislative Leaders

New investments in our youngest Minnesotans!
Thank your leaders today.

For the first time in years, the youngest Minnesotans can be counted among the legislative session’s winners with a total of $60 million in new investments. Your constant support and heartfelt advocacy made this possible. Now we need you to take one last action:

Send a thank you message to your legislators and Gov. Dayton today!

Governor Mark Dayton and the Minnesota Legislature have invested $46 million for each of the next two budget cycles for quality pre-kindergarten early learning scholarships for Minnesota’s most vulnerable children. The scholarships will help nearly 9,000 kids access quality early learning programs, preparing them for school and lifelong success.

This investment in scholarships, combined with the $20 million investment in CCAP tied to quality in the Health and Human Services bill, is a substantial win for Minnesota’s youngest and most at risk children.

Now is the time to thank Gov. Dayton and your legislators for making these investments.

This incremental increase in investment is part of an innovative approach to prepare more children for success in school by helping Minnesota’s youngest children access high quality early learning programs proven to improve school readiness outcomes.

As advocates, we still have work to do to continue to build a strong early learning system that benefits every child in Minnesota. But today, let us take a moment to recognize how far we’ve come and thank the leaders who have made it possible.

Say thank you to your legislators and Gov. Dayton today.

Click on the link to Think Small’s website below to send your message:


Or call:

Governor Mark Dayton - 651-201-3400

Speaker of the House Paul Thissen – 651-296-5375

Senate Majority Leader Thomas Bakk - 651-296-8881

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2013/05/22/politics/all-day-kindergarten-early-childhood-education-bill-signing


Get more details of what passed in the Legislative Update below.

You Are Invited to Policy Hour


Minnesota's Future now hosts Policy Hour, a monthly opportunity for early childhood and school-age care professionals to connect with each other and learn about current policy issues.

Join us on Tuesday, June 4, 2013 to get a wrap up of the legislative session, days after the legislature adjourns. Come and hear all the details of what passed and what didn’t and get any burning questions answered. We’ll also hear from Dan Solomon, staff from Sen. Al Franken’s office, about what’s happening at the federal level.

Noon-1:00 p.m.
Think Small
2021 East Hennepin Avenue - Suite 250
Minneapolis, MN 55413


This forum is open to all! Feel free to bring your lunch!

Questions: Please contact Sara Benzkofer at sarab@mnaeyc-mnsaca.org.
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Legislative Update
May 20th, 2013 - Child Care Aware MN
Health and Human Services Omnibus bill (HF 1233)
  Key Issues for Child Care Centers

 
§  Restores the allowable child care assistance absent days to 25 per year, and includes additional days for a medical exemption.

§  Extends CCAP to adoptive parents when one parent is working and the other is disabled.

§  Includes the Governor’s proposal to tie 3 and 4 star rated programs to the accreditation differential. 3 star programs would receive 15% above the maximum CCAP rate and 4 star programs would receive 20% above the maximum CCAP rate.

§  Includes language heard earlier in the session to create a new process for approving/accepting new accrediting bodies to be recognized with the accreditation differential.

§  Also adds the Governor’s proposal for CCAP rate simplification (which will provide updated rates for some providers).

§  Increases continuity of care by allowing a 30-day reinstatement period for families served by Basic Sliding Fee (allowing children to stay in high quality care regardless of some changes in their parent’s schedules).  

§  Allows families headed by a parent under 21 years of age who is pursuing a high school or General Equivalency Diploma and does not qualify for MFIP benefits to be eligible for MFIP child care assistance (rather than potentially being put on a waiting list for the BSF program).

§  Strengthens program integrity by aligning disqualification periods and withholding authorizations or payments for up to three months to a provider in violation of licensing or CCAP rules.  

§  Establishes a child care provider fraud investigation and data analysis

E-12 Education Omnibus Bill (HF 630)
Key Issues for Child Care Centers

• Includes $46 million for the 2-year biennium ($40 million of new investment plus the existing $6 million) for pre-k scholarships for 3- and 4-year olds and their younger siblings.
• Caps annual total of scholarship at $5,000.
• Llimits scholarship use to 3- and 4-star rated programs beginning in 2016 statewide,  
• Provides scholarships for the babies of teen parents.

• Allows children receiving scholarships to keep their scholarships until they enter kindergarten.

• The bill does not include a provisional rating process as originally proposed (i.e. allowing programs to accept scholarships by committing to/while going through the rating process).

• Funds expansion of all- day Kindergarten statewide at $130 million

Provides base funding for School Readiness, ECFE, Health & Developmental screening, Educate Parents Partnership, Kindergarten entrance assessment.

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FREE  Parent Aware Orientations in Ramsey and Hennepin County
 
Think Small is hosting FREE Orientation sessions for child care centers and family child care providers intending to participate in the July 1 - December 31, 2013, Parent Aware or Building Quality cohorts.
 
Please call Amanda at 651-233-2264 to sign up for an Orientation.
 
WEDNESDAY - May 29th – 6:30 – 8:30 pm
Think Small Mpls office – 2021 E. Hennepin Ave., Mpls  55413
 
TUESDAY - June 11th  -  6:30 – 8:30 pm                       
Think Small St. Paul office – 10 Yorkton Court, Roseville   55117

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A recent NYTimes article by Eduardo Porter documents lagging U.S. investment in quality Early Childhood Development:


Quotable facts from the article:

If education is supposed to help redress inequities at birth and improve the lot of disadvantaged children as they grow up, it is not doing its job.

 …the difference in cognitive performance (of children whose mothers had graduated from college than of those whose mothers dropped out of high school) was just as big at age 18 as it had been at age 3.

The gap is there before kids walk into kindergarten,” Mr. Heckman (Nobel Laureate in Economics) told me. “School neither increases nor reduces it.”

The U.S. gap is enormous, one of the widest among the 65 countries taking part in the Program for International Student Achievement run by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

American students from prosperous backgrounds scored on average 110 points higher on reading tests than disadvantaged students, about the same disparity that exists between the average scores in the United States and Tunisia. It is perhaps the main reason income inequality in the United States is passed down the generations at a much higher rate than in most advanced nations.

Mr. Heckman and Mr. Cunha estimated that raising high school graduation rates of the most disadvantaged children to 64 percent from 41 percent would cost 35 to 50 percent more if the assistance arrived in their teens rather than before they turned 6.