How Will the Governor’s Budget Impact Early Care and Education?

by | February 21, 2017

Home 9 Early Care and Education 9 How Will the Governor’s Budget Impact Early Care and Education? ( Page 12 )

WCCF has analyzed Governor Walker’s key budget proposals for early care, described in a two-page summary HERE 

Below are some highlights:

Increase in the Wisconsin Shares Child Care Subsidy budget
The proposed child care subsidy budget includes an increase from the 2016-17 base of $8.5 million in year one and $27.5 million in year two. 

Most of the increases are to cover new requirements from the revised federal Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) re-authorization intended to provide better stability for working families and better continuity of care for their children. The proposal includes a shift to 12-month eligibility, rather than 6 months, and extended subsidies when a family’s income exceeds the current threshold of 200% of poverty. However, it appears that there is no increase in child care subsidy payment rates, even after years of declining rates.money 2 Quality Child Care: No Change
The proposed budget for “Quality Care for Quality Kids” is basically unchanged, with a 1% increase. The proposal does not include policies that could have increased quality, such as grants to meet and sustain higher quality standards, increasing funding for T.E.A.C.H scholarships and REWARD stipends, or raising subsidy payment rates.

Home Visiting Gets a Boost
The Governor’s proposal adds $3.9 million to the Family Foundations Comprehensive Home Visiting (FFHV) program, which will serve an additional 400-550 families. The increase is a significant boost to the current annual $8.65 million budget.

The Legislative Fiscal Bureau is working on their detailed analysis of the Governor’s proposal, so we should have more information sometime in March.

Dave Edie
Early Education Policy Analyst

Kids Forward
Kids Forward

Join us to build a Wisconsin where every child and family thrives.

Recent

Our Take: The Wisconsin 2023-25 Biennial Budget

Our Take: The Wisconsin 2023-25 Biennial Budget

We appreciate Governor Evers being a stop gap for some of the most egregious proposals from the Republican-controlled Joint Finance Committee (JFC). But, if we want to actually address Wisconsin’s racial disparities, we have a lot more work to do.

Proposed Tax Cut Privileges Wealthiest 1%, Leaves Struggling Families Behind

Proposed Tax Cut Privileges Wealthiest 1%, Leaves Struggling Families Behind

Wisconsin can be a place where we all—regardless of race or place—have what we need to make ends meet. However, last week the Republican-controlled Joint Finance Committee voted for a tax cut that would aid in gutting supports for families. Letting Wisconsin’s wealthiest off the hook from paying what they owe means many struggling families are left behind, particularly children and families of color and those furthest from opportunity. We are calling on Governor Evers to stand up for everyday families and veto this tax cut for the wealthy few.

Sign up for Emails

Your address helps us identify your legislators and the most relevant messages to send you.