DHS Announces A Public Hearing and that you Should Not Listen To Unofficial Sources

DHS Announces A Public Hearing and that you Should Not Listen To Unofficial Sources

DHS has announced that on April 12, 2017, MDHS made minor updates to the CCPP Policy manual to:

Allow MDHS to begin the process of designating centers as standard and comprehensive under Mississippi’s early childhood plan, “A Family-Based Unified and Integrated Early Childhood System.”

Replace terms such as “licensed” and “unlicensed” with the more appropriate term “CCPP-approved.”

However, due to many request for a public hearing, a public hearing will be held to collect public comments on only the updates submitted on April 12 to the CCPP policy manual. (The date has not been announced.)

Reimbursement rates are still being determined.

To view the eligibility process of  “A Family-Based Unified and Integrated Early Childhood System”, click here:

“To ensure quality of early learning program and service delivery for children, a center must maintain its eligibility to be designated as either standard or comprehensive following the general recommendations by the SECAC committees (see Appendices A-C). Each year centers will go through an initial eligibility process and subsequent annual redetermination processes. Any center that fails to meet the basic requirements for its designation will be given six months to successfully implement a corrective action plan. The corrective action plan will be developed by an external evaluator in consultation with the child care center director and technical assistance coach. Failing to reach goals outlined in a corrective action plan will result in loss of designation at the end of the current annual eligibility term. Comprehensive centers could be downgraded to standard if the center still meets the minimum requirements for that designation. Any center no longer designated at the standard level will be ineligible to redeem child care vouchers until the center is deemed eligible in the future.

 

Once eligible, centers must engage in continuous quality improvement based on a scale that assesses the extent to which a center should engage in additional technical assistance for maintaining and improving quality. Standard and comprehensive centers will be scored on type-specific scales that reflect the expectations for each center designation. Each scale will include environmental-quality factors, process-quality factors, and factors related to the center experience of parents and their children. Quality evaluation will also include a parent satisfaction survey seeking input in several areas that best describe the quality of the experience of parents and their children. The survey will be conducted as part of there (sic) determination process. Comprehensive centers will additionally be scored on the assessment of the children and the results of an external evaluation. The scale will be designed to help identify areas where centers need technical assistance for maintaining and improving quality so that centers can maintain their eligibility to redeem vouchers. Each continuous quality improvement plan will be unique based on a child care center’s strengths, needs, and program-specific goals. Scale scores will not be used to rank or grade centers for comparison across centers, unlike the case with the quality rating system, and will only be used to determine appropriate quality-improvement activities and need for technical assistance that will lead to measurable improvement in services and help centers maintain eligibility to redeem vouchers.”

 

 


NAEYC Accreditation Nationwide

NAEYC Accreditation Nationwide

NAEYC Criteria as a Strategy for Improving Child Care

As you know, child care providers asked to review the Draft Standard Application on March 15, 2017, were presented self-assessment mirroring NAEYC criteria (which is closely aligned with ECERS) including a “required personnel registry”.

While it is the duty of DHS to carry out the implementation of the CCDF State Plan, the policy-makers and individuals responsible for sweeping change for disadvantaged child care small businesses are the members of the Governor’s SECAC. (Click here to review limited contact info and identification of State Early Childhood Advisory Council membersSECAC Committee members making the recommendations determining whether or not you will have the privilege to continue to serve low-income children for less than market rate – on a year by year basis based on assessment scores – are not listed.) Please do not contact me for telephone numbers. I have no such information I am willing to share. Thanks!

At the SECAC meeting held on March 23, 2017, I incorrectly reported only 2 NAEYC accredited child care centers in Mississippi – there are actually, currently 30 and most represent more stable sources of funding than the CCDF. Check it out! Hover your mouse over each blue balloon. (Click here.) 

That is also a gain of 1 since 2007. See the 2007 NAEYC graphic below.

Ten percent, (10%) of child care programs across the nation hold NAEYC accreditation.

HHS has decided the government-child-care-market it created through the Child Care Development Fund over a period of two decades is no longer solely a work support system. It must be redesigned to demonstrate, and qualify (with degrees), and operate (equal) to Head Start and Title I Preschool programs without parity and without sufficient CCDF funding.

SECAC announced Mississippi’s CCDF State Plan was being carried out with NO REQUEST for additional CCDF funding.

Reprinted from Accreditation Update, Fall 2007, a publication of the National Association for the Education of Young Children

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


MLICCI Child Care Matters Lobby Day TUESDAY!

MLICCI Child Care Matters Lobby Day TUESDAY!

This will be an opportunity to receive updates:

•The new State Health Department monitoring of child care centers four times a year,

•the new child care plan coming out of SECAC, and

•Our legislative agenda.

Lunch will be served.

2017-capitol-day

 


Building on Families: the New Early Childhood System

On Wednesday, December 7, 2016, the State Early Childhood Advisory Council (SECAC) and the Mississippi Department of Human Services (MDHS) presented a very rigorous process of maximizing funding and services to families and child care programs by utilizing existing resources through the reauthorization of the CCDBG Act of 2014

Building on Families: the New Early Childhood System

Dec. 7, Jackson, MS – Governor Phil Bryant listens to Dr. Laurie Smith’s SECAC presentation of Mississippi’s New Family-Based Early Childhood System.

‘If a man is laid off and loses his job, he is going to be eligible for work force training. His children are going to be eligible for Medicaid and mental health services. Good nutrition and early learning practices will be introduced to strengthen his home and high quality child care services, Head Start and Pre-K will be available to his family. We are going to build on his family and better equip him, because he seeks the American Dream too.’ 

Governor Phil Bryant

 

MDHS Executive Director John Davis expresses his faith in federal and state partners including CCPP Child Care Providers. Certificates for New Enrollment will be issued in January.

‘We have met with our partners: Work Force Development, state agencies, the Mississippi Community College System and child care providers. We are positioned, now, not to provide isolated services as before, but to maximize our resources and integrate our efforts through common case management, a collaborative referral process, and an integrated data system unlike any other in the country. We can do great and wonderful things!’

MDHS Executive Director John Davis

 

Mississippi Low-Income Child Care Initiative Executive Director Carol Burnett and Cassandra Welchlin intently follow Dr. Smith’s presentation of Standard Child Care and Comprehensive Child Care. MLICCI led a state-wide provider Vote of No Confidence for Mississippi’s Quality Stars.

‘Families in need of services will be embraced at the Point of Entry…when they make application for child care assistance. Parents will be informed of the supports available and referred for early intervention according to individual need and a family service plan. The parent will be informed of child care providers available within the area. Parents will have the option to enroll their children in one of two types of voucher-eligible centers: (1) standard or (2)comprehensive. To be classified as a standard center, a child care center must be licensed and meet minimum federal and state standards. To be classified as a comprehensive center, a child care center must first meet the requirements of a standard center. A comprehensive center must also engage in additional activities specifically designed to improve the quality of the learning experience for three- and four-year-old children. Technical assistance to achieve the comprehensive designation will be available. Once eligible, centers must engage in continuous quality improvement based on a scale that assesses the extent to which a center should engage in additional technical assistance for maintaining and improving quality. 
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“This is an answer to prayer. Dr. Laurie Smith’s name will be lifted up high by our church congregation on Sunday!” Patricia Young, Bountiful Blessings, Itta Bena, MS

Click here to review the Mississippi family-based unified and integrated early childhood system in more detail.

A corrective action plan will be developed by an external evaluator in consultation with the child care center director and technical assistance coach.

(Scores will not be used to rank or grade centers.)

SECAC Executive Director Laurie Smith

 

“To pay for the new federal requirements, state officials had to make cuts elsewhere in the budget.  We worked to make sure we are spending as we need to, to make sure we have money to fund everything that we need to fund.” Cathy Sykes, MDHS Deputy Administrator of Federal Programs

MDHS, in collaboration with federal partners, the Mississippi State Department of Health and the Mississippi Community College Board, successfully trained a CCPP workforce of 6500! Other like/needed trainings are to be announced as we move forward. Further, the Mississippi Community College Board (MCCB) will be responsible for managing local early childhood academies. These academies will provide technical assistance, coaching, and training and provide management for the resource and referral offices. Federal partners are requiring that new market rates only begin upon completion of all redeterminations and all enrollment of CCPP child care providers as either Standard Care or Comprehensive Care facilities. The decision as to what the increased market rates will be are almost complete. The new rates are scheduled to begin July 1, 2017. (Current Quality Stars Bonus Payments will continue and remain the same until July 1, 2017.) Certificates for new enrollment may be issued in January, 2017, but for the current rate.’

MDHS Deputy Director of Federal Programs Cathy Sykes

 

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New market rates increases will begin July 1, 2017.

 

 

‘We are working to provide a rates increase that will allow low-income child care providers to be able to afford to engage in quality initiatives.’

NSPARC Executive Director Mimmo Parisi

 

‘Thank you for listening to child care providers and for developing technical assistance and training at the Community Colleges.’

Childcare Directors Network Alliance President Deloris Suel

‘Thank you for extending and continuing Resource and Referral. I cannot wait to share this news with Excel by 5 communities.’

Excel by 5 Executive Director Eileen Beazley

For questions that arise during this period of transition, call the MDHS Help Desk at 800-345-6347.


MSU and MDHS Say R&R to Operate Through the End of the Contract Period

Joint Statement From Mississippi State University and the Mississippi Department of Human Services

”The contract between MDHS and MSU to operate the Early Years Network program -including the Resource and Referral sites- will end Dec. 31, 2016. On Jan. 1, 2017, MDHS will assume full leadership of these programs. MSU and MDHS will continue to work cooperatively and diligently to operate these sites through the end of the contract period to continue to serve the needs of Mississippi families impacted by this program and to seek solutions that keep the flow of services from being interrupted during this orderly transition.”

This joint statement follows last Thursday’s unexpected notice and/or joint announcement by Excel by 5 and/or the MSU Early Years Network that Resource and Referral sites would be abruptly shut down and “out of service” effective at the close of the following business day, November 11, 2016, seven weeks ahead of schedule and current CCDF funding.
On September 21, 2016, the Clarion-Ledger reported ”a meeting was convened Sept. 13 of all technical assistance employees under the Early Years Network. They were informed at the meeting of a letter from DHS Executive Director John Davis that the contract with MSU Extension Services would be terminated Dec. 31.  No reason was given.”
 

New Child Care Payment Rules Proposed: See Link and More!

New Child Care Payment Rules Proposed:  See Link and More

Mississippi Code 25-43-3

(i) “Rule” means the whole or a part of an agency regulation or other statement of general applicability that implements, interprets or prescribes:

(i) Law or policy, or

(ii) The organization, procedure or practice requirements of an agency. The term includes the amendment, repeal or suspension of an existing rule.

First Public Hearing: August 22, 2016

One of the requirements of the of 2014 reauthorization of the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) Act was to create policies that govern the implementation of the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF). A new policy manual, following the guidelines of the CCDBG, has been developed. The policy manual was submitted to the Secretary of State’s office, August 2, 2016.

The manual will be available for public comment for the next 25 days, ending on August 27, 2016.

To review the Child Care Payment Program (CCPP) Policy Manual, click here.

(To review the Mississippi CCDF policy checklist, click here.)

A public hearing regarding the new policy manual is scheduled for Monday, August 22, 2016 at 5:30 PM in Room 145 of the Woolfolk Building in Jackson, Mississippi.

 

Child Care Matters has scheduled a statewide input meeting for low-income child care providers, parents and those who will be most impacted by the proposed rules to be held on Saturday, August 20, 2016 from 10:00 AM – 3:00 PM at the Jackson Marriott Downtown, 200 E. Amite Street, Jackson, MS.

RSVP

There is no registration fee for the statewide input meeting, but lunch will only be provided for you if you RSVP by August 15th to: Carol Burnett at cburnett@mschildcare.org or to Jearlean Osborne at (228) 234-3343.

 


Shrinking the Number of Child Care Providers Down to a Level that May Be Supported by Inefficient CCDF Funding: It’s Economics!

Shrinking the Number of Child Care Providers Down to a Level that May Be Supported by Inefficient CCDF Funding:

It’s Economics!

HHS Market Correction and Government Failure

In economics, market failure is a situation in which the only way for my small business to be better off is for someone else’s business to become worse off.  (Click here.)

The existence of a market failure is often the reason governments may intervene to correct a particular market. ‘Economists are often concerned with the causes of market failure and possible means of correction. Analysis of market failure should play an important role in many types of public policy decisions and studies.

‘However, government policy interventions, such as taxes, subsidies, bailouts, wage and price controls, and regulations (including poorly implemented attempts to correct market failure), may also lead to an inefficient allocation of resources, sometimes called government failure.’

“Government failure occurs when the government intervention causes a more inefficient allocation of goods and resources than would occur without that intervention and when an agency performs inadequately, including when it fails to intervene or does not sufficiently intervene.” (Click here.)

Twice now, I have personally heard State Actors in Mississippi share their thoughts that there are too many licensed child care programs serving low-income children to support the CCDF assisted enrollment needed for each small business to be successful and included in the development of universal Pre-K.

One floated the merger of community-based private businesses while another suggested the Mississippi State Department of Health should just not issue any new child care licenses.

Of course, as was recently pointed out by one representing self-employed child care providers, that is nothing short of economic policy perspective favoring government intervention in the market process to correct the market or as he said, “fascism”.

“Fascism operated from a Social Darwinist view of human relations. The aim was to promote superior individuals and weed out the weak.” (Click here.)

The Propaganda Ministers of Systematic Underinvestment (Government Failure)

Almost two decades ago, the Child Care Development Fund was created as a work force support system to low-income parents transitioning from Welfare to Work.

Many well established, quality child care programs with long waiting lists that received full payment in advance did not have to discount fees or wait to be reimbursed in order to fill vacancies or provide the diversity of mixed socio-economic incomes.

Programs that were willing to participate could only do so in a very limited way due to the losses that would occur as a result of accepting below market rate child care assistance as well as the additional administrative burden of reporting to states for payment.

HHS researched a formula for setting rates that middle income providers would accept – 75% of Current Market Rates.

Even still, there were not enough slots available to absorb the large number of low-income children in sudden need of care.

With the full force of HHS and federal resources, MDHS went out seeking those who would operate child care facilities and be willing to serve low-income children and children of color.

Grants for facilities were made available and SBA loans were granted.

Licensing was assisted and the largely segregated low-income child-care-market was born!

Now, HHS has decided the government-child-care-market it created through the Child Care Development Fund over a period of two decades is no longer solely a work support system. It must be redesigned to demonstrate, and qualify (with degrees), and compare (equal) to Head Start and Title I Preschool programs without sufficient HHS monitoring for leveraged or equal per child stipends (parity) and without sufficient CCDF funding.

HHS has initiated a “market correction” for the redistribution of wealth (the CCDF)…no matter the consequence or social injustice (for the public interest and safety of the children).

HHS has allowed Mississippi to reimburse even Tier I low-income providers at 75% or less of 2004 market rates for over a decade and in spite of three increases in the minimum wage.

In fact, for many years, HHS has accepted many Plans from many states throughout the nation demonstrating inadequate reimbursement fees (falling far below HHS’s “scientifically proven” and recommended rates for providing low-income children access to “high quality” programs).

And when HHS finally did intervene, it diminished the possibility of ever providing “high quality” for child care programs serving large numbers of low-income children (which are so prominent in segregated Mississippi) by requiring states to increase per child reimbursement fees only up to a percentage of 2014 Market Rates as payment to providers in FY 2017-2019 (government failure).

In the recent “Pre-K Collaborative-early-learning -modelonlylobbying-campaign carried out by The Hechinger Report (through the absolute comedy of all white reporters interviewing all white policy makers on “the race issue”), Louise Davis, chair of the Early Years Network, who manages all of Mississippi’s CCDF quality funding, stated that the MOST CRITICAL problem with crippling reimbursements that obstruct quality in low-income child care settings is, “Most of these directors are in it for their heart. They don’t have a business background. These directors … don’t know how to do a budget.”  (Click here.)

The Public Interest

In their paper, “Is Market Failure a Sufficient Condition for Government Intervention?”, economists Art Carden and Steve Horwitz write, “…even when the market provides less than ideal outcomes, government actors will put in place policies that won’t necessarily produce a better market outcome, but may reflect their own priorities.” (Click here.)

Economist Robert Schenk writes, “…those who are involved in government have the same motivations that those in the private sector have; that is, they are motivated by a narrow concept of self-interest: wealth, fame, and power.”

“There is no guarantee that policies made by representatives pursuing their own interests will be in the interests of the society.”  (Click here.)

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services “positioned a study” demonstrating the effects of a child’s physical environment on intellectual and social development.

This developed into a multi-million dollar “quality” industry that includes marketing of programs designed to rate child care centers according to the physical environment, the number of staff with college degrees, and reduced child/staff ratios. These programs are called Quality Rating and Improvement Systems.

In all this time of HHS endorsed “QRIS”, this is what we have learned:

In 1999, a comprehensive, longitudinal study by the RAND Corporation of Colorado’s QRIS program, one of the longest-running in the country, found Q.R.I.S. programs are expensive and complicated to administer, that state funding to sustain QRIS in the future may not be available, and worse, QRIS programs do not raise learning or social development outcomes for students. (Click here.)

Fourteen years later, QRIS proved no better!

In 2013, Education Week Reported “Child-Care Rating Systems Earn Few Stars” and said the tool falls short in predicting quality. Researchers, “who were from several universities, found that children attending highly rated pre-K programs did not have significantly better results in math, pre-reading, language, and social skills when they finished the programs, compared with the children attending lower-rated programs.” (Click here.)

Gail L. Zellman, the principal investigator on the Qualistar study for RAND, said:

 “The field has not sufficiently determined how to evaluate quality and how to assess it in a valid way.”

So, why the continued and heavy push for QRIS?

Perhaps government market correction in spite of government failure and an inefficient CCDF – without stimulus – requires the “excludability policy” QRIS provides.

Excludability

“Excludability deals with the ability of agents to control who uses their commodity, and for how long – and the related costs associated with doing so.” (Click here.)

“A public good is excludable if you can prevent somebody from using it.” (Click here.)

QRIS allows states to draft a tool that will be used to exclude child care programs in the “public interest” market correction for “improved” school readiness and social development.

In Mississippi’s Early Learning Collaborative Act of 2013, QRIS is the tool used for child care excludability.

In the RFP for stabilizing MDHS Slots Contracts, QRIS was the tool of excludability.

In the only opportunity to receive anything above a percentage of 2004 Market Rates in Mississippi in more than a decade, QRIS was/is the tool of excludability.

Re-write Mississippi Quality Stars if you want, but QRIS will still be the tool of excludability!

Add a “State Approved” curriculum if you like; QRIS will still be the tool of excludability!

QRIS, by design, redistributes the wealth to those programs more financially able to participate in costly (so-called) improvements in the first place, deepening class disparity and inequality.  (According to the MLICCI Step-Up  QRIS research, the average amount of “up-front” funding that it takes a center to move from a 1-star to a 2-star rating is approximately $40,000 per center.) See SECAC QRIS Executive Summary by clicking here.

It does not necessarily result in a socially desirable distribution of resources or the overall well-being of society.

For instance, MDHS is required, in the State Plan to raise reimbursement fees from 2004 Market Rates to 2014 Market Rates, increase quality funding, begin to monitor 1,200 hundred in-home providers who are not licensed, serve the same number of children (HHS doesn’t specify whether or not MDHS must maintain children in full-time care and part-time care), set re-determination for a true calendar year regardless of ongoing parental employment, and all is to be done with little or no new funding.

Such demand by HHS can only be met if child care programs are weeded out, and the wealth is redistributed, in some cases, in a way counterproductive to quality.

HHS “washes its’ hands” of the actual market correction applicability, the populations that are helped and harmed by its policies and potential disparate impact culpability through a little thing called “states’ flexibility” or the “State Plan”.

HHS stops just short of requiring QRIS as such, but it does require states to report how they will move more children into “high quality” care as defined by the state.

Class Disparity and Inequality

Nowhere is the class disparity and inequality brought on by HHS intervention (and often, the failure to intervene) better demonstrated than in The Hechinger Report’s article, “The Race Issue”:

“In visits to 30 child care centers in central Mississippi, reporters saw centers split along lines of race and class.”

“There is a direct link between how much parents can pay and how much a child care center can charge that, in turn, dictates the size of daycare budgets for salaries and supplies. Many centers serving low-income black children can’t offer the same resources as those that cater to middle- and upper-middle class white children, such as expensive playgrounds, highly educated teachers or lower-than-required staff-to-child ratios.”

“The reimbursement a family receives for child care tuition varies depending on a child’s age and family income, but assistance only covers a percentage of a center’s tuition. That means centers that serve low-income children often receive reimbursements that cover only a fraction of what it actually costs to run a daycare.” (Click here.)

Disparate Impact

There are other laws to be considered by HHS and government actors when adopting CCDF policy including the Small Business Administration Act, the Unfunded Mandates Act, Administrative Procedures Law, The Takings Clause, and the Title VII Civil Rights Act – all which may have been ignored at times. It is either that, or there has been too little uniform reporting gathered by HHS for it to truly determine if its policies governing low-income child care have resulted in socially desirable distribution of resources or if they have resulted in further class disparity and inequality.

Many argue HHS Policies are deepening the cycle of poverty for low-income working parents and the low-income child care industry that HHS seeks to correct – often which are minority owned and disadvantaged small businesses.

Under Title VII Civil Rights Act, disparate impact theory involves a claim that a facially neutral practice is being applied in a manner as to disadvantage members of a protected class.

December 1, 2015, (six months ago) the Mississippi Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights issued an Advisory Memorandum to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights regarding the Committee’s months long investigation of the federal Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) and related programs, and the potential for disparate impact on the basis of race or color as a result of the State’s discretionary administration of these funds. The investigation and subsequent Memorandum found that many eligible children, predominantly within the African-American community, were not serviced by the subsidy program and that funding that should have gone to support eligible children was redirected. (Click here.)

The investigation also found that the program rating system used in Mississippi to promote higher quality childcare limited the participation of African-American owned and operated childcare facilities.

The Mississippi Committee recommended the HHS Office of Child Care should conduct or commission a thorough study of the validity of the QRIS evaluation criteria as a predictive measure of improved developmental outcomes for children. This study should include a review of evaluation outcomes in diverse communities to ensure criteria are culturally relevant to diverse populations, and that they do not unduly disadvantage any particular protected class. (Click here.)

I know of no such HHS investigation that is now in the works – my point exactly!

In fact, the HHS Office of Child Care declined to participate in the Mississippi Committee’s panel discussions in the first place.

March 14, 2016, by majority vote, the United States Commission on Civil Rights (“Commission”), issued a letter recommending program changes to the Child Care Subsidies Distribution Program in the state of Mississippi within the purview of the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) and Health and Human Service (HHS). (Click here.)

Commission Chairman Martin R. Castro on behalf of a majority of the Commission stated, “When the most vulnerable and needy children are prevented from accessing urgently needed resources because of their race, color or other improper reasons, it is the role of this Commission and our State Advisory Committees to demand action and changes. To fail to heed these recommendations by our Mississippi State Advisory Committee will continue to doom a generation of children to living in the cycle of poverty—and that must not be allowed.”

The Commission stated:

“The Quality Rating and Improvement Systems (QRIS) program which is purported to promote higher quality child care appears to instead penalize and costs so much that it excludes the participation of African-American owned and operated child care facilities.”

During Mississippi Committee hearings, CLASP reported that Mississippi saw a decline of 53 percent in the number of low-income children served between 2006 and 2013.

Since 2013, the number of licensed child care programs overall has shrunk from 1,800 to 1,500 while the number of less costly, unlicensed in-home providers has increased (redistribution of wealth/child care on the cheap). Where is the “highly qualified teacher” in unlicensed, in-home care?

HHS mandates do not necessarily result in a socially desirable distribution of resources or the overall well-being of society.

Mississippi Quality Stars

In just over the decade that the Mississippi Early Childhood Institute has received millions and millions of dollars to serve as administrator of Mississippi’s Quality Stars, and many millions more have been awarded to provide technical assistance to improve “quality” in child care, Mississippi, at its’ most recent assessment reported (61%) were rated as 1 Star – the lowest level.

After ten years, less than 20% or 74 of only 383 programs participating (including those enrolled in CLASS.) were rated at the 3, 4- or 5-Star levels required to participate in Pre-K or be deemed “high quality”.

“Monica May, director of the QRIS program, said the program trains evaluators to be consistent. ” (Click here.)

“May said some complaints of racial bias in QRIS may stem from the way the quality rating system started out in the state.”

“In 2011, the state adopted a more comprehensive quality rating program, which also included efforts to help centers improve.”

Yet, in 2015, External Evaluation of QRIS Conducted by the Frank Porter-Graham Group revealed the following truths:

  • In a block structure, fewer than 20% of programs earned a Level 3 or 4; in the point and hybrid structures, more than 70% of programs achieved a Level 3 or 4. Block structures generally provide greater challenges to improvement in ratings. Mississippi continues with the block scoring system in spite of the known and growing popularity of the less stringent hybrid scoring system.
  • Nationally, the most common classroom observation reassessment period is every 3 years. Mississippi requires reassessment annually unless a program wants to maintain its current rating in which case it is every 2 years.
  • Mississippi’s Quality Stars system is the only system in the nation that requires providers to finance and maintain a parent resource center.
  • There is no due process for appealing a score.

Click here to review the evaluation and see pages 22-23 for low provider participation rates.

Seventy-five percent of Mississippi providers have rejected QRIS as a measure of quality.

MDHS has planned to continue with Quality Stars anyway without conducting a statewide quality needs assessment as required by HHS.

Rather, MDHS manipulated a survey presented only to parents of children enrolled in the few child care programs participating in QRIS.

In June, 2015, Mississippi appointed a Mississippi Quality Stars Re-write Committee.

I do not know who the members of that committee are. I am told it’s a secret.

Notice of their meetings is not posted on the web site or the Mississippi Public Meeting Transparency Website as required by Mississippi Code Section A 025-0041-0013. (Click here.)

I have also not been able to locate the committee’s minutes online.

Minutes must be recorded within 30 days and are a public record and must reflect the members present and absent; any votes taken; etc. (Click here.)

I have suggested that all the information be posted to the agency’s appropriate web page in order to practice transparency and inform stakeholders.

For now, it is either top secret and classified or requires that I travel to inspect the record and minutes at MDHS State Office.

Economics

The correct and effective use of available resources and economics is the study of how people deal with scarcity.

The State Early Childhood Advisory Council has been charged with the implementation of the 2017 – 2019 CCDF State Plan.

SECAC has appointed many committees and work groups to carry out this work.

Notice of some committee meetings has been posted on the SECAC Upcoming Meetings Page. (Click here.)

All SECAC Committee meetings and sub-committee meetings are also governed by the Mississippi Open Meetings Act and Mississippi Code Section A 025-0041-0013.

Therefore, self-employed child care providers and all who are personally vested (with commercial loans) or interested parties and stakeholders may be informed and attend as many meetings as they wish.

There are choices other than QRIS that may really improve quality.

They do not have to be embedded into QRIS to be successful.

If government actors insist only on embedding other quality initiatives into QRIS, then they are, in fact, insisting on retaining the “power of excludability” that may forever “evolve” to suit their funding priorities.

(If most severe exclusion has been done to us once, it can be done again.)

SECAC is looking now to develop a successful low-income child care early learning model.

Mississippi Building Blocks is such a model.

MBB improves the lives of children and it does not require QRIS.

We should not support or participate in ongoing, most stringent excludability policy and potential disparate impact.

Economics is a science of choice making and making the best choice among alternatives given inefficient CCDF funding and government failure.

If that cannot be accomplished without all/greatest harm to just one sector of Mississippi’s early learning system, then HHS and all government actors should be held to account.


Transcript of Final State Plan Hearing and QRIS Objection Posted Online

Verbatim Transcript of Final CCDF State Plan Hearing and QRIS Objection Posted Online

The verbatim transcript of the Final Hearing of the Child Care Development Fund State Plan has now been posted online.

Please note that NO member of SECAC representing the child care industry (or otherwise), who would dare to present derogatory and unfounded characterizations (potential defamation) of fellow child care providers to SECAC committee members but who do have a vote on the implementation of the CCDF State Plan, even bothered to attend!  (OUT OF TOUCH!)

Fortunately, Administrative Procedures Law instructs the following:

(i) “Rule” means the whole or a part of an agency regulation or other statement of general applicability that implements, interprets or prescribes:

(i) Law or policy, or

(ii) The organization, procedure or practice requirements of an agency. The term includes the amendment, repeal or suspension of an existing rule.

§ 25-43-3.105. Economic impact statement, requirement and conditions.

(1) Prior to giving the notice required in Section 25-43-3.103, each agency proposing the adoption of a rule or amendment of an existing rule imposing a duty, responsibility or requirement on any person shall consider the economic impact the rule will have on the citizens of our state and the benefits the rule will cause to accrue to those citizens.

2) Each agency shall prepare a written report providing an economic impact statement for the adoption of a rule or amendment to an existing rule imposing a duty, responsibility or requirement on any person. The economic impact statement shall include…

(e) An analysis of the impact of the proposed rule on small business;

(g) A determination of whether less costly methods or less intrusive methods exist for achieving the purpose of the proposed rule where reasonable alternative methods exist which are not precluded by law;

(3) No rule or regulation shall be declared invalid based on a challenge to the economic impact statement for the rule unless the issue is raised in the agency proceeding. No person shall have standing to challenge a rule, based upon the economic impact statement or lack thereof, unless that person provided the agency with information sufficient to make the agency aware of specific concerns regarding the statement in an oral proceeding or in written comments regarding the rule.

(3) Before the adoption of a rule, an agency shall consider the written submissions, oral submissions or any memorandum summarizing oral submissions, and any economic impact statement, provided for by this Article III.

(2) An action to contest the validity of a rule on the grounds of its noncompliance with any provision of Sections 25-43-3.102 through 25-43-3.110 must be commenced within one (1) year after the effective date of the rule.

On February 19, 2016, child care leadership representing the Mississippi Child Care Coalition raised formal objection to the proposed “re-write” and continuation of Q.R.I.S. embedded in the 2017-2019 CCDF State Plan.

To review the transcript, please click here.

Fight the Power (and boorish disrespect), y’all!

 

 


Mississippi under scrutiny for its failure to use TANF funds for their proper purpose…which is Child Care.

Mississippi under scrutiny for failure to use TANF funds for their proper purpose…which is Child Care!

States are permitted to directly allocate federal TANF dollars, which are designed to assist needy families with child-care costs, the Sun Herald reported Tuesday.

But even with all the rhetoric given to validate the need for Preschool and early intervention as a means to reduce rates of incarceration down the road , MDHS has been investing TANF dollars to support Adolescent Opportunity Programs that provide resources to at-risk juvenile delinquents and their families – just the other way round!

Worse,  in 2013, Mississippi allocated none of the subsidies to child care, leaving more than $7.8 million in TANF funds unspent, according to the Department of Health and Human Services – the same year Jill Dent, now with the Department of Education, and DECCD introduced the proposed finger scanning method of payment designed to reduce full-time reimbursement costs to providers serving low-income children as a savings to the state.

Current 2016 reimbursement rates to CCPP providers are based on 2004 Market Rates.

State actors now warn that a proper increase to current market rates will likely mean fewer children and families will be served in 2017.

Also on Tuesday, the Clarion-Ledger reported only about 15 percent of federally eligible children in Mississippi actually received TANF benefits, according to a report by the Mississippi Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.

Since 2013, the number of licensed child care programs has fallen from 1,800 to approximately 1,575.

This report seems to validate concerns raised by the Mississippi Child Care Coalition that child care policies developed and dictated by State actors are having a disparate impact on self-employed child care providers and low-income families.

Regardless, State actors, in the new State plan, tout and screen for/screen out (by referral) providers unable to meet very costly “quality” demands and suggest even fewer children may be served in 2017 also due to new, mandatory twelve month periods of re-determination.

SECAC (State Early Childhood Advisory Council) has been charged (by the Governor) with the implementation of the new State Plan and will be working to fine tune and amend policy over a period of upcoming months.

To learn more about the State Early Childhood Advisory Council, click here.

 

 

 


Dear Editor:

Dear Editor:

In reference to Sunday’s Clarion-Ledger article, “Bill could break cycle of inaction on child care in Miss.”, I wish to say Mississippi has an Interagency Council for the coordination of agencies and services. It is called the State Early Childhood Advisory Council and was established in compliance with federal statute.

Senate Bill 2274 appears to be exactly as referenced by Petra Kay in the Clarion-Ledger – a struggle for “who will be in charge” of limited resources including the Child Care Development Block Grant.

Senator Wiggins’ bill does not address the unfunded mandate for child care providers to hold a B.S. Degree in Early Childhood in order to be deemed “a quality rated center” or the costs that would be passed along to parents as a result.

SB 2274 would either create more duplication of services or eliminate the Governor’s Early Learning Council (SECAC) and thus remove the large majority of stakeholders from the policy making table.

SB 2274 appears to be in support of a plan that was reviewed by national education experts twice, FAILED twice in the Race to the Top- Early Learning Challenges and did not secure the federal resources needed to implement the poorly rated plan. See CL article, December 10, 2014, “Mississippi misses out on federal preschool money – again”. http://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2014/12/10/mississippi-misses-federal-preschool-money/20194705/

This “crisis” has no real merit.

Debbie Ellis

Mississippi Association of Licensed Child Care Providers

Greenwood, MS