Early Childhood

The View From The White House

February 09, 2000 1 min read
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President Clinton’s child-care and early-childhood-education proposals for fiscal 2001 include the following requests:

  • A $1 billion expansion of Head Start, which would bring the total budget for the federal preschool program to $6.3 billion annually.
  • $3 billion over five years for a new Early Learning Fund.
  • $1 billion for the 21st Century Community Learning Centers program, which serves children after school and during the summer. The program is now funded at $400 million.
    President Clinton delivering his State of the Union Address.
    —Benjamin Tice Smith
  • An $817 million increase in the child-care and -development block grant, which would bring the total funding to more than $4 billion annually.
  • $539 million over five years to implement a new tax credit for businesses that provide child-care services for their employees.
  • $30 million for a new early-childhood professional-development initiative to help train child-care providers.
  • A $10 million increase for a program to help college campuses provide child care for low-income parents who want to pursue higher education. The increase would bring funding for the program to a total of $15 million annually.
  • Approximately $30 billion over 10 years to expand the child- and dependent-care tax credit. The credit would become refundable for low-income families. The maximum level of the credit would increase from 30 percent to 50 percent for families earning up to $60,000. Parents who stay at home with their children under age 1 could also take advantage of the credit.
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A version of this article appeared in the February 09, 2000 edition of Education Week as The View From The White House

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