New York Daily News

Most kids in pre-K needy

- BY JOHN SPINA and BEN CHAPMAN

FAMILIES FROM low-income neighborho­ods are more likely to enroll in city prekinderg­arten programs, a Daily News analysis of Education Department data shows.

Kids from areas with median incomes that are below the city average of $51,865 account for 62% of registrant­s in the free, full-day programs that kicked off Wednesday.

By contrast, 4-year-olds who live in areas with median incomes higher than $100,000 account for just 2% of signups for Mayor de Blasio’s signature education program.

De Blasio, who aimed his $445 million pre-K expansion at underserve­d communitie­s, said needy families can benefit from city pre-K programs, which now boast 65,000 registrant­s and counting.

“It’s especially powerful for struggling and working families, where it closes the achievemen­t gap and helps parents make ends meet,” de Blasio said.

De Blasio boosted the Big Apple’s pre-K capacity from 19,000 seats in 2013 to more than 80,000 seats in 2015 by expanding existing programs and funding a slew of new ones.

The city added more than 21,000 new pre-K slots in 2014, when some critics said high-income neighborho­ods got more than their fair share of new seats.

But nearly half of the 12,000 new pre-K seats added in 2015 were taken by kids from low-income neighborho­ods. And just 5% of new pre-K students come from areas with average incomes higher than $100,000.

The two areas with the highest increase in attendance for 2015 are Corona, Queens, and Bensonhurs­t, Brooklyn. Both of those neighborho­ods have median incomes of roughly $45,000, according to 2013 U.S. census data.

Bronx barber Eric Maldonado said free pre-K gives his son Ethan, who turns 4 in November, access to a high-quality education that his family couldn’t otherwise afford.

“As a family who is less fortunate, we’re getting exactly what we would pay for if we were more fortunate,” said Maldonado, 33, whose family of five relies on roughly $45,000 in combined yearly income earned by him and his wife. “It’s a quality education, and that matters to any family.”

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