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State Pre-K Slated for Elimination in Governor's Budget Plan

Josh Edge / APRN

A pre-kindergarten program that serves about 3 percent of Alaska's 4-year-olds would be cut in Governor Bill Walker's proposed budget.

Governor Bill Walker’s proposed budget calls for the elimination of a $2 million-dollar pre-kindergarten program that serves six school districts in Anchorage, Juneau, and Western Alaska.

Alaska was one of just 12 states in the U.S. without state-funded pre-kindergarten when it started a pilot program in 2009.

The pre-K program is free to qualifying low-income families and, according to Deputy Education Comissioner Les Morse, has seen considerable success in its 6-year run.

There is solid data around its success," says Morse. "We specifically looked at various different assessments on students in terms of their’ performance as well as the delivery by districts. It's really been very successful. The largest problem with the program is that we really haven’t been able to grow it. So it really continues to serve the same number of students and the same dollar amount that it did during its pilot phase."

Morse says the original plan was to pilot the program, then expand it after a few years. But according to the National Institute for Early Education Research, the program never reached more than 3 percent of 4-year-olds in the state.

About 40 of those toddlers are in the Lower Kuskokwim School District, where Early Childhood Coordinator April Blevins says the pilot program is the most accessible of the early education programs offered to low-income families in the district.

"There are other programs," Blevins says, "but they’re grant-funded programs that the parents have to apply with these huge applications, and it usually discourages people from going that route. Whereas applying for the pilot program is very simple."

The pre-K program is also in high demand; it serves 28 children in Bethel, five in Tununak, and nine in Akiuk. Blevins has another 30 kids on a waiting list.

And besides providing education with certified teachers, Blevins said the pre-K program fills another need in communities where reliable childcare can be nearly impossible to find.

"For 6.5 hours a day, people can go to work knowing their kid is safe and receiving some education," said Blevins. "I’ve had parents cry, because it’s the first time they’ve been able to go back to work because they’ve been watching their child, because there is no childcare. So I think sometimes there’s underlying emotions ... people don’t realize how the program affects their daily life.”

In 2014, nearly five times as many 4-year-olds in the state were enrolled in Headstart programs as the pre-K program, according to NIEER. According to that organization, three-quarters of all 4-year-olds were not served by Headstart or pre-K.

Governor Walker'sproposed education budget would also delete $820,000 dollars in grants for other early childhood programs, and it would reduce funding for the Alaska Native Science and Engineering Program by $385,000 dollars.