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Guest column: Snyder is right to invest in expanded early childhood programs

By Doug Luciani and Debbie Dingell/Children’s Leadership Council of Michigan

As a former venture capitalist, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder knows much about how to calculate return on investment. Today, we applaud him for seeing the ROI in young children.

In his State of the State Address, Snyder acknowledged Michigan has 29,000 4-year-olds eligible for public preschool who are not enrolled because there are not enough slots and he pledged to close, and eventually eliminate, that gap. He said: “It's important for us to make a major budget commitment to get as many kids as possible and get us on a path to getting all those kids in Great Start and early childhood programs.”

We completely agree!

And now, Snyder has a quick opportunity to reinforce those courageous words with the state budget proposal he will unveil in early February. Senate Appropriations Chairman Roger Kahn has proposed to increase state investment in the state’s public preschool program by $130 million. Superintendent of Public Instruction Mike Flanagan and Speaker of the House Jase Bolger also have called for more investment in early childhood. We are eager to see the governor’s response in his budget. We think early childhood is one of the very best investments this jobs-focused governor can make in our great state. Four reasons why:

“You can’t get there” without it. More than half of Michigan’s fourth-graders are not proficient readers. Solving this problem is the governor’s top goal for elementary education. You can’t get there without expanding high-quality preschool programs, Superintendent Flanagan declares. Research shows big gains in reading and math proficiency for at-risk students who attend the state’s Great Start Readiness (GSRP) preschool program.

“The Forgotten 4-Year-Olds.” Nearly 30,000 eligible 4-year-olds are shut out of GSRP because there are not enough spaces for all the children in need. The $130 million investment proposed by Flanagan and Kahn can go a long way toward solving this problem. For more, read Bridge Magazine’s report on the “Forgotten 4-Year-Olds” at Michigan's Forgotten 4-Year-Olds.

That Giant Flushing Sound. Michigan taxpayers are spending $100 million per year for more than 13,000 students who flunk kindergarten and must repeat it. The quickest way to solve this unspeakable waste of money and young brains is to assure all children arrive at kindergarten healthy and ready to learn. Maximizing the public preschool enrollment for at-risk students is a key step.

The Business Mandate. More than 120 statewide business executives have worked through the Children’s Leadership Council of Michigan, which we co-chair, to call attention to the urgent and crucial need for a more comprehensive preschool and early learning strategy in Michigan. Business voices across our state are pushing for comprehensive early childhood strategies because early childhood is the best way to give at-risk children a fighting chance to ascend the steep path to success in today’s global economy.

A $130 million expansion of public preschool programs in Michigan will change lives.

As columnist David Brooks puts it, “By age 5, it is possible to predict, with depressing accuracy, who will complete high school and college and who won’t.”

Snyder can literally improve statistical probabilities for young children with his next budget. That’s power. We urge him to exercise it.

Doug Luciani is president of the Traverse City Area Chamber of Commerce and a co-chair of the Children’s Leadership council. Debbie Dingell is president of d2 Strategies and a co-chair of the Children’s Leadership Council.

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Bridge welcomes guest columns from a diverse range of people on issues relating to Michigan and its future. The views and assertions of these writers do not necessarily reflect those of Bridge or The Center for Michigan. Bridge does not endorse any individual guest commentary submission. If you are interested in submitting a guest commentary, please contact David Zeman. Click here for details and submission guidelines.

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