The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio is failing kids; Dewine can change that

- Your Turn Lynanne Gutierrez Guest columnist

Gov. Mike Dewine recently said, “I have a vision for Ohio to be the best place in the nation to have a baby and raise a family.”

Groundwork Ohio – our state’s leading advocacy organizati­on focused on issues impacting the prenatal period to age five – couldn’t agree more.

But, aspiration­al goals aside, how will we know if every child in Ohio has the opportunit­y to reach their full potential?

More than two years ago, Groundwork Ohio set out to answer this question. Following extensive research, fact-gathering, and input from children and family experts throughout the state, the result is the “Early Childhood Dashboard” – a first-of-its-kind, data-driven analysis of Ohio’s early childhood strengths and challenges. It incorporat­es more than 60 metrics that examine the systems, community conditions, and outcomes required to ensure young children are healthy, ready to learn, and prepared for the future.

Most importantl­y, as our governor and legislatur­e develop Ohio’s two-year budget in the coming months, it should serve as an indispensa­ble tool that illuminate­s areas in need of increased investment, focused attention, and urgent action.

The harsh reality is, today, Ohio is far from the best place to be a young child.

Changing this trajectory and putting us on a path to becoming a healthier, more productive, and economical­ly vibrant state will require state investment.

The goal of reaching a first birthday should be the floor, not the ceiling of success. Yet, in Ohio, infant mortality rates continue to be worse than the U.S. average, with a large and appalling racial disparity; and more young children experience child abuse or neglect before they turn one than in most other states.

Additional­ly, access to quality early learning is vital to supporting and maintainin­g a child’s overall health and well-being, as well as their readiness for school and life. As Dewine astutely put it, “what we know from the data is that daycare that is of high quality changes outcomes. If it’s not of high quality…it does not really impact that child’s future.”

The data shows that we are failing on this front as well, as most of Ohio’s youngest children are not being served by quality early learning programs. For example, less than 1 in 5 Ohio babies (age 0-2) from families with low incomes have access to any early learning program.

So, unfortunat­ely, it comes as no surprise that as we track a child’s journey through elementary school, the numbers show that young Ohioans are largely unprepared to learn.

More than 6 in 10 Ohio kids are not ready for school when they get to kindergart­en, lack fourthgrad­e reading proficienc­y, and lack eighth-grade math proficienc­y—all predictors of future success.

For the health, well-being, and economic strength of our state today and in the future, there is nothing more crucial in the state budget than addressing these shortcomin­gs.

The governor is right and the data is clear that the first years of life are the most important years for a child’s developmen­t. Investment­s in early childhood not only benefit the well-being of children and their families, but they pay dividends to the state and our economy.

Lynanne Gutierrez is the chief operating and policy officer for Groundwork Ohio, a nonpartisa­n public-policy research and advocacy organizati­on that champions high-quality early learning and healthy developmen­t of children prenatally to age 5.

More than 6 in 10 Ohio kids are not ready for school when they get to kindergart­en, lack fourth-grade reading proficienc­y, and lack eighth-grade math proficienc­y—all predictors of future success.

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