Head Start program leaders say federal aid is not enough to serve all qualified children

RICHMOND — Maria Chavez first heard about George Miller III Children’s Center almost two decades ago when a neighbor recommended that she send her now-18-year-old daughter there for preschool. After sending all three of her children to the same program, she said her initial nervousness turned into pride that she could provide them a quality early education.

“I’m so happy it’s accessible, because as a mother who works, I can’t always give them much time, but here they prepare them so well,” Chavez said, waiting for her youngest daughter, 4-year-old Emily, to finish snack time. “Seeing how they treat my child is beautiful. The help and support we receive here is like another family.”

The George Miller III center, which currently serves 124 students, will soon celebrate its 20th anniversary; Contra Costa County officials opened the 20,000-square-foot campus on April 5, 2004. It remains the most recent Head Start site to be built in the county.

Head Start has been here since the program’s inception in 1965, helping thousands of preschool-aged children from low-income families in Contra Costa County learn, grow and get ready for school. But colorful classrooms and hands-on teachers still rely on investments from the federal government to uphold the county’s legacy as the largest provider of preschool within its borders.

County officials have until March 26 to apply for another five-year grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service’s $13.1 billion budget for Head Start, which would distribute up to $29.6 million to more than a dozen sites dotted across Contra Costa County next year.

That dollar amount is the cap set by the federal government that can be requested. Roughly half of those dollars are earmarked for staff salaries and benefits in fiscal year 2025, in addition to an anticipated $7.4 million in supplemental state and county funds.

While $37 million might seem like a lot, those government infusions can currently only fund enough resources to teach roughly 2,100 children — 11% of the 18,000 children living in Contra Costa County who qualify for Head Start, which means their family income is 130% or less of the federal poverty rate.

Contra Costa County Supervisor John Gioia said that’s left a large gap in access to a program that’s been proven to help reduce intergenerational poverty, especially as children living in low-income Latino and primarily Spanish-speaking households make up a majority of the county’s Head Start enrollment, and more than 70% are in single-parent families.

“That gives you a sense of how great the need is,” Gioia said. “It’s great to have child development dollars, but the federal government needs to invest more in this program.”

California’s Head Start program is the largest in the nation, accounting for 10% of all children served and approximately 13% of total funding, according to a recent annual report from the California Department of Social Services. In 2021, more than 82,000 children were enrolled in Head Start, and the program employed over 26,800 staff and operated more than 5,000 classrooms statewide.

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