Current:Home > reviewsBiden’s plan would raise salaries for Head Start teachers but could leave fewer spots for kids -Legacy Profit Partners
Biden’s plan would raise salaries for Head Start teachers but could leave fewer spots for kids
View
Date:2025-04-16 18:23:34
WASHINGTON (AP) — A new plan from the Biden administration could significantly increase salaries for thousands of low-paid early childhood teachers caring for the country’s poorest children but might force some centers to reduce their enrollment.
The Health and Human Services agency’s proposed federal rule would require Head Start programs, which are struggling nationwide with staffing shortages, to raise teachers’ salaries to put them on par with local public schoolteachers, and to beef up benefits. The requirement could raise wages by as much as $10,000 for Head Start teachers over the next seven years, the agency estimates.
“Early educators make poverty wages in many places,” said Anna Markowitz, a University of California Los Angeles professor who has studied Head Start turnover and wages. “There are real consequences to these low wages.” She said “it’s unfortunate we had to wait for the turnover to become a major crisis.”
Head Start teachers, many of whom are required to have a bachelor’s degree, make about $39,000 a year on average — far less than educators with similar credentials. Head Start teacher turnover has doubled over the last decade, with the federal government estimating 1 out of every 5 Head Start teachers left their classroom last year.
That’s created problems for the country’s youngest learners: Waitlists are ballooning and classrooms are closing. As many as 275,000 infants, toddlers and preschoolers are on waitlists nationwide, according to the National Head Start Association. The federally funded program is designed to give free education and care to infants, toddlers and preschoolers in locally run classrooms situated in public schools, community centers and private daycares or preschools. Taxpayers spend about $12 billion for Head Start to serve roughly 1 million children.
The number of kids in classrooms could shrink, though, if teacher salaries are raised and Congress doesn’t grant more money for the program. Biden asked Congress for an additional $1 billion for Head Start this year.
“As a result of these necessary reforms, one potential impact could be a reduction in Head Start slots in some programs in order to ensure the quality of services delivered,” the rule says.
In Cincinnati, Head Start should be able to help nearly 2,000 students but right now just over 1,500 kids are in classrooms because of staffing shortages, said Renee Daniel, vice president for early childhood education at the Cincinnati-Hamilton County Community Action Agency.
Daniel was “jumping up and down” when she read the administration’s proposal to raise wages and add heartier benefits for Head Start staff. But without additional federal money, she would have to permanently cut as many as 800 seats to pay for those increases.
“Right now we’re suffering, and we’re not serving the children anyway, because we don’t have the staff,” Daniel said.
Daniel said in recent years, teachers have left to work in the health care sector or at Amazon. Daniel recently raised teacher salaries to start at $21 an hour. But to match local public school teacher salaries, pay will need to be about $33 per hour. The rule also suggests adding retirement benefits to teacher compensation, a new perk she’d have to offer.
“How am I going to create parity with that, if I don’t get any new money?” she asked. Daniel said she plans to weigh in on the proposed rule, with the federal government accepting comments on the plan until Jan. 19.
Health and Human Services is counting on Congress to provide additional money to Head Start, which is why it’s giving programs until 2031 to fully up their salaries to match local teacher pay. The administration also believes the program can “maintain its current capacity” with the wage increases, Katie Hamm, deputy assistant secretary for the Office of Early Childhood Development, said in an email.
“The proposed changes are necessary to stabilize the Head Start program, which is facing a severe workforce shortage because staff can earn higher wages from other employers,” Hamm said.
If Head Start programs do raise their wages, their jobs could become coveted in communities where daycare workers and early childhood educators are meagerly paid, said Markowitz, the UCLA researcher. The average median wage for childcare workers sat at $13.71 per hour in May 2022, falling behind average pay for retail or food and beverage workers.
“It’s definitely going to have impacts throughout the sector,” Markowitz said. “Ideally, it’s going to be part of a broader sea change where child care educators are compensated at a fair level.”
veryGood! (67653)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Rivers remain high in parts of northern and central Europe after heavy rain
- Two teenagers shot and killed Wednesday in Lynn, Massachusetts
- New Mexico proposes regulations to reuse fracking wastewater
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Mbongeni Ngema, South African playwright and 'Sarafina!' creator, dead at 68
- Maine bars Trump from ballot as US Supreme Court weighs state authority to block former president
- Dominican baseball player Wander Franco fails to appear at prosecutor’s office amid investigation
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Put Your Gift Card to Good Use at Nordstrom's Half-Yearly Sale That Includes up to 70% off SKIMS & More
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- US applications for jobless benefits rise but labor market remains solid
- Nevada drivers can now add a symbol identifying certain medical conditions on their driver license
- Massive building fire temporarily shuts down interstate highway in Louisville, Kentucky
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Wanted: Colorado mother considered 'primary suspect' in death of 2 of her children
- Missouri school board to reinstate Black history classes with new curriculum
- These twins are taking steps for foster kids − big steps. They're walking across America.
Recommendation
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
Alabama going to great lengths to maintain secrecy ahead of Michigan matchup in Rose Bowl
'I wished it had been me': Husband weeps after wife falls 70 feet off New York cliff
New Year's Eve partiers paying up to $12,500 to ring in 2024 at Times Square locations of chain restaurants
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
At least 20 killed in Congo flooding and landslides, bringing this week’s fatalities to over 60
Fox News Mourns Deaths of Colleagues Matt Napolitano and Adam Petlin
Mom says pregnant Texas teen found shot to death with boyfriend was just there at the wrong time