Delaware 2023-2024 Regular Session

Delaware Senate Bill SCR24 Latest Draft

Bill / Draft Version

                            SPONSOR:      Sen. Gay & Rep. S. Moore & Rep. Michael Smith       Sens. Hocker, Lockman, Pettyjohn, Sturgeon, Wilson; Reps. Baumbach, Briggs King, Chukwuocha, Harris, Morrison, Ramone, K. Williams, Wilson-Anton           DELAWARE STATE SENATE   152nd GENERAL ASSEMBLY       SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 24       RECOGNIZING APRIL 2 THROUGH 8, 2023, AS "WEEK OF THE YOUNG CHILD" IN DELAWARE.      

     

     SPONSOR:      Sen. Gay & Rep. S. Moore & Rep. Michael Smith       Sens. Hocker, Lockman, Pettyjohn, Sturgeon, Wilson; Reps. Baumbach, Briggs King, Chukwuocha, Harris, Morrison, Ramone, K. Williams, Wilson-Anton     

SPONSOR: Sen. Gay & Rep. S. Moore & Rep. Michael Smith
Sens. Hocker, Lockman, Pettyjohn, Sturgeon, Wilson; Reps. Baumbach, Briggs King, Chukwuocha, Harris, Morrison, Ramone, K. Williams, Wilson-Anton

 SPONSOR:  

 Sen. Gay & Rep. S. Moore & Rep. Michael Smith 

 Sens. Hocker, Lockman, Pettyjohn, Sturgeon, Wilson; Reps. Baumbach, Briggs King, Chukwuocha, Harris, Morrison, Ramone, K. Williams, Wilson-Anton 

   

 DELAWARE STATE SENATE 

 152nd GENERAL ASSEMBLY 

   

 SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 24 

   

 RECOGNIZING APRIL 2 THROUGH 8, 2023, AS "WEEK OF THE YOUNG CHILD" IN DELAWARE. 

   

  WHEREAS, in 2023, we recognize the 52nd anniversary of the Week of the Young Child; and    WHEREAS, the Week of the Young Child is an annual celebration sponsored by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), the world's largest early childhood education association, with nearly 60,000 members and a network of 51 local, state, and regional affiliates, including the Delaware Association for the Education of Young Children;    WHEREAS, NAEYC first established the Week of the Young Child in 1971, recognizing that the early childhood years, from birth through 8 years of age, lay the foundation for children's success in school and later life; and    WHEREAS, the Week of the Young Child is a time to recognize that all children's opportunities are our responsibilities and to recommit ourselves to ensuring that every child has access to, and experiences, the type of early environment, at home, at child care, at school, and in the community, that will promote early learning; and    WHEREAS,  at birth, the average babys brain is about a quarter of the size of the average adult brain. Incredibly, it doubles in size in the first year and keeps growing to about 80% of adult size by age 3 and 90% nearly full grown by age 5 ; and   WHEREAS, high-quality early childhood programs provide important benefits to children, families, and our state and national economies; and    WHEREAS, high-quality early care and education can help ameliorate the effects of poverty, detect and remediate delays, identify and help prevent child neglect, and lead to positive outcomes for individual children, helping them be better prepared for school and be more likely to succeed in life; and    WHEREAS, paying the costs of high-quality early childhood education is a revenue-generating investment over time, resulting in a broad range of benefits that accrue to individuals and society at large; and    WHEREAS, high-quality early childhood education depends on high-quality early childhood educators who ensure that children, supported by families, have the early experiences they need for a strong foundation; and   WHEREAS, young children need skilled, educated, competent, consistent, and compensated early childhood educators, who reflect a rich diversity of linguistic, racial, and cultural identities; and    WHEREAS, working families need an early childhood education system that allows them access to quality child care settings and need-sufficient high-quality child care spaces beginning at birth available in the community; and    WHEREAS, a strong regulatory structure is needed to give working families peace of mind that their children are safe and in high-quality early care and education settings, and robust subsidies, scholarships, and tax credits are needed for families at all income levels that support the true cost of quality early childhood education; and    WHEREAS, early childhood educators need the ability to earn a family-sustaining wage that is commensurate with the required education and skills they bring to the complex and valuable work they do and to have basic workplace benefits such as health insurance, retirement, paid sick leave, paid vacation, and professional development leave.    NOW, THEREFORE:    BE IT RESOLVED that the Senate of the 152nd General Assembly of the State of Delaware, the House of Representatives concurring therein, recognizes April 2 through 8, 2023, as "Week of the Young Child" in Delaware.    BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the members of the Senate and the House of Representatives hereby recognize the critical, complex, valuable, and demanding work of early childhood educators and urge all members of our community to support efforts that increase children and families access to high-quality early childhood education.      

 WHEREAS, in 2023, we recognize the 52nd anniversary of the Week of the Young Child; and  

 WHEREAS, the Week of the Young Child is an annual celebration sponsored by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), the world's largest early childhood education association, with nearly 60,000 members and a network of 51 local, state, and regional affiliates, including the Delaware Association for the Education of Young Children;  

 WHEREAS, NAEYC first established the Week of the Young Child in 1971, recognizing that the early childhood years, from birth through 8 years of age, lay the foundation for children's success in school and later life; and  

 WHEREAS, the Week of the Young Child is a time to recognize that all children's opportunities are our responsibilities and to recommit ourselves to ensuring that every child has access to, and experiences, the type of early environment, at home, at child care, at school, and in the community, that will promote early learning; and  

 WHEREAS,  at birth, the average babys brain is about a quarter of the size of the average adult brain. Incredibly, it doubles in size in the first year and keeps growing to about 80% of adult size by age 3 and 90% nearly full grown by age 5 ; and 

 WHEREAS, high-quality early childhood programs provide important benefits to children, families, and our state and national economies; and  

 WHEREAS, high-quality early care and education can help ameliorate the effects of poverty, detect and remediate delays, identify and help prevent child neglect, and lead to positive outcomes for individual children, helping them be better prepared for school and be more likely to succeed in life; and  

 WHEREAS, paying the costs of high-quality early childhood education is a revenue-generating investment over time, resulting in a broad range of benefits that accrue to individuals and society at large; and  

 WHEREAS, high-quality early childhood education depends on high-quality early childhood educators who ensure that children, supported by families, have the early experiences they need for a strong foundation; and 

 WHEREAS, young children need skilled, educated, competent, consistent, and compensated early childhood educators, who reflect a rich diversity of linguistic, racial, and cultural identities; and  

 WHEREAS, working families need an early childhood education system that allows them access to quality child care settings and need-sufficient high-quality child care spaces beginning at birth available in the community; and  

 WHEREAS, a strong regulatory structure is needed to give working families peace of mind that their children are safe and in high-quality early care and education settings, and robust subsidies, scholarships, and tax credits are needed for families at all income levels that support the true cost of quality early childhood education; and  

 WHEREAS, early childhood educators need the ability to earn a family-sustaining wage that is commensurate with the required education and skills they bring to the complex and valuable work they do and to have basic workplace benefits such as health insurance, retirement, paid sick leave, paid vacation, and professional development leave.  

 NOW, THEREFORE:  

 BE IT RESOLVED that the Senate of the 152nd General Assembly of the State of Delaware, the House of Representatives concurring therein, recognizes April 2 through 8, 2023, as "Week of the Young Child" in Delaware.  

 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the members of the Senate and the House of Representatives hereby recognize the critical, complex, valuable, and demanding work of early childhood educators and urge all members of our community to support efforts that increase children and families access to high-quality early childhood education. 

   

  SYNOPSIS   This resolution recognizes April 2 through 8, 2023, as Week of the Young Child in Delaware.   Author: Senator Gay  

 SYNOPSIS 

 This resolution recognizes April 2 through 8, 2023, as Week of the Young Child in Delaware. 

 Author: Senator Gay