New York Daily News

Adams ‘undermines’ free preschool: Council caucus

- BY CAYLA BAMBERGER DAILY NEWS EDUCATION REPORTER

City Council members are accusing the Adams administra­tion of “underminin­g success” of the city’s free early-childhood programs.

The Black, Latino and Asian Caucus penned a letter to Mayor Adams on Tuesday night to express “deep concerns about the health of our city’s early-childhood care and education system.” It was signed by 31 caucus members — a majority of the Council.

“We share much of the vision that you previously laid out in your Blueprint for Child Care and Early Childhood Education,” read the memo, “yet current city agency administra­tion of these programs is underminin­g success, including … overly bureaucrat­ic contractin­g processes, severely late contract payments, and insufficie­nt enrollment and outreach efforts.”

The letter comes a couple of weeks after the Council pointed fingers at the administra­tion during an oversight hearing for not doing enough to connect parents with programs, given the overwhelmi­ng demand for child care amid thousands of stubbornly vacant preschool seats.

Roughly 16,000 seats in preschool for 3-yearolds are currently vacant, according to city data.

The caucus proposed several reforms, including better reimbursem­ent systems to pay contracted child-care providers on time, and expanded programs that offer extended hours and summer days that align with the schedules of working parents.

Members also suggested an overhaul of the city’s enrollment practices, giving more responsibi­lities to small businesses so that their directors can recruit and enroll families in their neighborho­od onsite. Currently, enrollment goes through the Education Department, providers explained. The proposed changes would invest in outreach campaigns to supplement those efforts.

“We know that Black, Latino and Asian children stand to lose the most if these agency problems are not resolved and proposed disinvestm­ent in the system occurs,” wrote the signatorie­s, including Co-Chairmen Kevin Riley (D-Bronx) and Oswald Feliz (D-Bronx), and Education Committee Chairwoman Rita Joseph (D-Brooklyn).

Joseph urged the Education Department, to bolster an outreach campaign that “mirrors the successful ‘UPK’ [universal prekinderg­arten] expansion” under the last administra­tion.

“You saw them everywhere,” the councilwom­an said of the agency’s outreach workers. “They tabled, they showed up. And at some point, they started rolling back and slowing down.”

“Our communitie­s are being inadequate­ly served right now,” she added. “There are a lot of wait lists, and programs are not in the right place.”

An external assessment of families’ childcare needs is ongoing, though education officials have not disclosed who is doing the audit or how much it will cost.

“Mayor Adams has put working families and everyday New Yorkers at the forefront of this administra­tion’s policy decisions,” said Amaris Cockfield, a spokeswoma­n for the mayor. “Since the beginning of this administra­tion, we have invested in a range of programs that target both our recovery from the pandemic and a new vision for public schools — all while prioritizi­ng our most vulnerable student population­s.”

Cockfield pointed to initiative­s to support nonprofits that contract with the city, including the newly created Mayor’s Office of Nonprofit Services, a contract oversight initiative called “ContractSt­at,” and a recent 12-week push to clear a backlog of delayed reimbursem­ents.

“We appreciate the City Council’s focus on these important initiative­s,” she added, “and look forward to finding ways to sustain and build on our work to lift up our students and schools in the budgetary process.”

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 ?? ?? Thirty-one members of the Black, Latino and Asian Caucus, including Rita Joseph (top l.) and Oswald Feliz (bottom l.), called on Mayor Adams (r.) to strengthen early-childhood ed.
Thirty-one members of the Black, Latino and Asian Caucus, including Rita Joseph (top l.) and Oswald Feliz (bottom l.), called on Mayor Adams (r.) to strengthen early-childhood ed.

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