Providing appropriations for and establishing a grant program for home-based child care.
Impact
This legislation is poised to have a significant impact on the child care landscape in Kansas. By providing financial incentives and establishing a structured mentorship program, this bill seeks to lower the barriers for new child care providers entering the field. The focus on recruitment, coaching, and the provision of tools for managing child care services is expected to improve the quality and availability of child care options, particularly in underserved areas. This initiative not only aims to bolster the child care workforce but also to create new opportunities for those looking to enter a vital sector of the economy.
Summary
House Bill 2664 seeks to allocate funding to enhance the availability of child care services in Kansas by establishing a grant program focused on home-based child care providers. The bill appropriates $15,000,000 from the state general fund for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2025, specifically designating up to $10,000,000 to be used for the recruitment and retention of these providers through the Kansas State University (KSU) Extension System. The overarching goal is to address existing shortages in child care by providing financial support and resources to individuals and organizations that can expand child care offerings within the state.
Contention
While the bill seems to have clear objectives, potential points of contention may arise around the allocation of funds and the eligibility criteria for receiving grants. Critics might voice concerns over the oversight of fund distribution, ensuring that the money reaches genuinely qualified providers rather than potentially benefiting organizations with unclear benefits to the child care system. Additionally, as the bill involves KSU 105's partnership with service providers, debates may surface regarding the effectiveness of such collaborations in achieving the bill’s goals without imposing undue regulatory burdens on participants.
Enhancing adult care home services by providing for adult care home workforce development through scholarships for part-time nursing students and setting minimum education levels for instructors at nursing schools, establishing an intergenerational child care program to enhance the adult care home environment by supporting adult care homes offering child care services through the awarding of grants by the secretary of health and environment and creating the intergenerational child care fund and authorizing the secretary to administer the fund.
A bill for an act relating to early childhood education and care, including by modifying provisions related to the statewide preschool program, the child development coordinating council, programs for at-risk children, the responsibilities of the department of education, the early childhood Iowa initiative, and the state child care assistance program, establishing the child care continuum partnership grants pilot program within the department of health and human services, making appropriations and reducing appropriations, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1135.)
Establishing periods of ineligibility for child care subsidy based on cooperation with child support services and requiring the secretary to conduct reviews of cooperation with child support.
Establishing certain license fees and training requirements, creating a process for day care facility licensees to apply for temporary waiver of certain statutory requirements and authorizing the secretary to develop and operate pilot programs to increase child care facility availability or capacity, transferring certain child care programs to the Kansas office of early childhood and separating licensing duties between the secretary for health and environment and the executive director of early childhood.
Appropriations: department of lifelong education, advancement, and potential; appropriations for fiscal year 2024-2025; provide for. Creates appropriation act.
Requiring work registrants ages 50-59 to complete an employment and training program to receive food assistance, establishing periods of ineligibility for child care subsidy based on cooperation with child support services and requiring the secretary to conduct reviews of cooperation with child support.