Improving Child Care

Local state Rep. Jeffrey Sánchez (center) accepts an honor for his work with the Early Education and Out of School Time Capital Fund from Mav Pardee (left), Children’s Investment Fund program manager, and Roger Herzog (right), executive director of Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation, on Feb. 4 at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts in the Fenway. The new fund will provide capital to improve facilities that offer care to children from low-income families. (Courtesy Photo)

SourceJamaica Plain Gazette

Senator DiDomenico honored by Children’s Investment Fund

Last week Senator Sal DiDomenico was honored by the Children’s Investment Fund and the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation for his work with the new Early Education and Out of School Time Capital Fund. The event was held at the offices of the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts (at the Landmark Center in Boston) on Feb 4th.

The Children’s Investment Fund provides loan and grant financing, technical assistance, and training to non-profit early childhood (ECE) and out-of-school time (OST) programs planning capital improvements.

The Fund is affiliated with CEDAC, a quasi-public, community development finance institution that provides technical assistance, pre-development lending and consulting services to non-profit organizations involved in housing development, workforce development, neighborhood economic development and capital improvement to child care facilities.

CEDAC is – active in national housing preservation policy research and development and is widely recognized as a leader in the non-profit community development industry. For additional information on CEDAC and its current projects, please visit www.cedac.org

SourceBoston Globe - Boston.com

Unique Funding Source

Education Week recently reported on a significant new early childhood funding stream in Massachusetts:

“The Massachusetts legislature recently passed a housing bond bill that includes funding for renovating child-care facilities around the state. The bill, signed by Governor Deval Patrick, a Democrat, on November 14, is a $1.4 billion package that includes $45 million in bond financing that would be used for capital improvements to daycare centers and after-school facilities serving children from low-income families…. In Massachusetts and around the country, many early childhood providers that focus on at-risk children have to make do with buildings that were not intended for the unique needs of young children. Many of those facilities lack adequate outdoor space, recommended safety measures, or accessibility for children or employees with disabilities.

“The Children’s Investment Fund, based in Boston, works statewide to provide grants, loans, and technical assistance to early childhood care providers and supported the measure. The organization released a study in 2011 that outlined some of the deficiencies of child care facilities around the state. ‘This is the first time that facilities’ financing for these service providers is part of community development legislation,’ said Mav Pardee, the program manager of Children’s Investment Fund. ‘It recognizes the vital role that education plays in children’s lives and is an investment in improving education quality, beginning early, when it is most effective.'”

SourceExchange Press, Inc.

Children’s Investment Fund secures vital resources for childhood education

The following was submitted by The Children’s Investment Fund and the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation:

The Children’s Investment Fund (CIF) and the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation (CEDAC) will join supporters to celebrate the new Early Education and Out of School Time Capital Fund, which will provide capital financing to improve the facilities of nonprofit early childhood education (ECE) and out of school time (OST) organizations serving children from low income families.

At the event, CIF—which is affiliated with CEDAC — will honor lawmakers, state officials, and community leaders who played a central role in the creation of this capital funding.

“We are thrilled to have the opportunity to honor and thank our partners who have all worked so hard to make this funding possible,” said Roger Herzog, CEDAC’s executive director. “I am especially grateful to the legislators who have taken the lead on this innovative, far-sighted legislation that will improve child care facilities, a key component of program quality.

They worked closely with advocates to ensure providers and children living in low income communities have access to high quality space for early education and out-of-school time activities.”

Honorees will include: State Senators James Eldridge (D-Acton) and Sal DiDomenico (D-Everett), Representatives Kevin Honan (D-Boston) and Jeffrey Sanchez (D-Boston), MA Department of Early Education and Care (EEC) Commissioner Tom Weber, Brenda Clement of Citizens Housing and Planning Association (CHAPA), Michael Durkin of the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley, and Kimberly Haskins of the Barr Foundation.

“The new capital financing program is truly innovative. Massachusetts is a leader in making state bond financing available to upgrade these facilities. This financing will help get children out of dreary basements and into bright, spacious classrooms with good ventilation, suitable furnishings, and other features that support program quality,” said Mav Pardee, CIF’s program manager.

“The legislators responded to providers’ accounts of the struggles they face in funding capital improvements and the impact of substandard space on children’s health and learning, and on teacher effectiveness.”

Working closely with partners at the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and the Merrimack Valley and CHAPA, CIF and CEDAC supported the effort to establish a new capital bond finance program to upgrade ECE and OST facilities throughout the state. Governor Patrick signed the legislation, which authorized $45 million over five years for these facilities, last November.

The provision was a part of the Affordable Housing Bond Bill (H 3727), which was championed by State Senator James Eldridge and State Representative Kevin Honan, co-chairs of the legislature’s Joint Housing Committee. In addition, State Senator DiDomenico and State Representative Sanchez sponsored a free-standing bill to ensure that capital funding for child care facilities would be made available.

“There are numerous studies that show the powerful correlation between children’s early environments and their health and wellbeing throughout childhood and into adulthood” said Pardee. “The physical environment is the setting where learning takes place, and it has a measurable impact on program quality. Building decent facilities will support our commitment to raising education quality and to closing the achievement gap, and should be considered a long term investment in the development of a skilled and educated workforce in Massachusetts”.

SourceBoston.com

Funding to Upgrade Child-Care Facilities Part of New Massachusetts Bond Bill

The Massachusetts legislature recently passed a housing bond bill that includes funding for renovating child-care facilities around the state.

The bill, signed by Gov. Deval Patrick, a Democrat, on Nov. 14, is a $1.4 billion package that includes $45 million in bond financing that would be used for capital improvements to daycare centers and after-school facilities serving children from low-income families. My recent article on the measure noted that in Massachusetts and around the country, many early-childhood providers that focus on at-risk children have to make do with buildings that were not intended for the unique needs of young children. Many of those facilities lack adequate outdoor space, recommended safety measures, or accessibility for children or employees with disabilities.

The Children’s Investment Fund, based in Boston, works statewide to provide grants, loans, and technical assistance to early-childhood care providers and supported the measure. The organization released a study in 2011 that outlined some of the deficiencies of child-care facilities around the state.

“This is the first time that facilities financing for these service providers is part of community development legislation,” said Mav Pardee, the program manager of Children’s Investment Fund, in a statement. “It recognizes the vital role that education plays in children’s lives and is an investment in improving education quality, beginning early, when it is most effective.”

© 2013 Editorial Projects in Education

SourceEducation Week

Mass. Enterprise Targets Inadequate Preschool Facilities

Published Online: October 15, 2013
Published in Print: October 16, 2013, as Mass. Enterprise Targets Inadequate Preschool Facilities
Mass. Enterprise Targets Inadequate Preschool Facilities
Focus is centers serving low-income families
By Christina A. Samuels
For years, Community Action Inc., in Haverhill, Mass., ran a Head Start program for more than 200 children in a building that once was a turkey coop.
The facility, located on land once owned by a religious order, came with low rent and pastoral surroundings, said John Cuneo, the executive director of Community Action. But the kitchen didn’t meet local code, the walls lacked insulation, and in the winter, frozen pipes in an outbuilding used as classroom space regularly required Mr. Cuneo to run a hose from the main facility so the children and staff members could have water.
Many preschools that serve low-income and rural communities are managing programs in makeshift spaces that were never built with the needs of young children in mind. But thanks to a nonprofit in Boston called the Children’s Investment Fund, Mr. Cuneo and other preschool providers in the state are getting training and money to renovate old facilities or build new ones.
A bill that is expected to win approval in the Massachusetts legislature would set the stage for a constant source of money for the work of the Children’s Investment Fund.
At a time when early education is getting attention from leaders at the federal, state, and local levels, the approach to funding and technical assistance that Massachusetts and some other states are pursuing is seen by advocates as a model for expanding high-quality preschool options.
“What we’ve seen in the last four or five years, when the economy has been bad, is that borrowing for improving facilities has really leveled off and virtually disappeared,” said Mav Pardee, the program manager for the Children’s Investment Fund. “Programs have been very concerned about mere survival.”
Makeover strategies
States are taking a variety of approaches to support the construction and renovation of preschool centers.
Direct Grants The Pennsylvania departments of community and economic development and public welfare collaborated in making “Child Care Challenge Grants” totaling $10 million per year. The program resulted in the construction or renovation of 55 centers licensed to serve 3,365 children.
Access to Public Debt North Carolina partnered with Self-Help Inc., a nonprofit community-development-finance institution, to guarantee loans to small center-based and home-based child-care businesses, using the federal Child Care and Development Fund.
Direct Loans Maryland’s business and economic development department has made child-care facility loans and loan guarantees to nonprofit and for-profit center-based programs. The state seeks private bank participation in the financing, charges market or slightly below-market rates, and writes the loans for 15 to 20 years.
Subsidized Loans The Connecticut Health and Educational Facilities Authority partially guarantees private-sector child-care loans to improve the creditworthiness of loan applicants who would not otherwise qualify.
Rate Enhancements In Maine, providers who have earned a “quality certificate” are eligible for a variety of state financing incentives as well as a 10 percent to 15 percent bonus over the state child-care-subsidy fee.
Technical Assistance The state contracts with the nonprofit Vermont Community Loan Fund to provide facilities-development assistance to centers. The nonprofit also administers a capital grant program that funds an annual state appropriation and sales of a special “Building Brighter Futures” child-care license plate.
Sources: Local Initiatives Support Corp.; Community Investment Collaborative for Kids
But the current national conversation has provided a boost, and an opportunity to think, once again, about the facilities where children may spend hours each day. Facilities “are another dimension of quality,” Ms. Pardee said.
Poor Climate Control
James Eldridge, a Massachusetts state senator who chairs the legislature’s joint committee on housing, said he expected the Massachusetts measure—part of a $1.4 billion housing-bond bill—to become law by the end of this month. The legislation would provide a $45 million bond for improving child-care facilities.
In 2011, the Children’s Investment Fund conducted a survey of 182 child-care centers across the state that target a low-income population, and found many of them to be lacking.
Several programs were housed in facilities that did not meet building code. Seventy percent of the centers did not have classroom sinks. Forty percent lacked restrooms directly accessible from the classroom, considered a best practice for programs serving young children. Only one space was fully accessible for children with disabilities.
Also, one-third of the centers said they were not able to maintain comfortable indoor temperatures in the winter and summer.
While those findings are specific to Massachusetts, they are not unusual in other parts of the country for preschool providers who serve a low-income population, said Amy Gillman, the senior program director for the Community Investment Collaborative for Kids, a program of the New York City-based Local Initiatives Support Corp. The collaborative works nationwide to provide technical assistance and funding to preschool providers.
“There’s a misconception that there’s enough of an operating stream that you can set some of that aside to pay for improved facilities,” Ms. Gillman said.
In reality, the margins are thin. “We tell providers to never take from a program,” she said. “You don’t want to build a building for a poor-quality program.”
Convincing lawmakers of the importance of high-quality facilities is not difficult, according to Ms. Gillman. “Mostly we hear that, ‘Yes, we do acknowledge that facilities are an issue.’ But what it comes down to is resources and where is the funding going to come from,” she said.
Permanent Funding
States have taken several different tacks to meet the facilities needs of child-care providers. Some have provided direct grants, as Pennsylvania did from 2002 to 2004. During that time, the state awarded $30 million to 55 centers, which used the money to build or renovate their spaces.
Other states have chosen to establish permanent funding streams, such as what Massachusetts is attempting to do. Connecticut, through its Child Care Facilities Loan Fund, provides bond financing for nonprofits, guarantees loans to induce private lenders to work with providers, and offers direct loans to small centers and home-based providers.
An additional challenge for providers is developing the expertise to plan a renovation or building project and see it through to completion. Preschool directors may know how to hire a good teacher, but usually have no experience hiring a qualified architect, Ms. Gillman said.
In 2003, Mr. Cuneo went through a program sponsored by the Children’s Investment Fund called Building Stronger Centers, where he and other providers learned the nuts and bolts of managing a construction project.
The fund also helped connect him with MassDevelopment, the state’s financing authority, which underwrote the $1.5 million renovation project, completed in 2007. The program is now housed in a former elementary school that had been mothballed by the local school district.
“The most important thing is having quality classrooms,” Mr. Cuneo said. “They’re nicely laid out, they are colorful, they are decorated appropriately, there are sinks in each classroom, and toilet facilities. And we were able to upgrade the playground area.”
Donna M. Denette, the executive director of Children First Enterprises in rural Granby, Mass., also went through the Building Stronger Centers program. Before renovations, her center was operating out of a vacant hair salon, a church basement, and the corner of a school cafeteria.
After $1.7 million in renovations, completed in 2010, the center now has appropriate classroom space for the preschool and school-age population it serves.
“We had this great philosophy, great staff, great curriculum, but the facility just didn’t support staff,” Ms. Denette said. “There was no place to have a kid who was sick waiting to be picked up, no place to have a private meeting with a parent.”
“I never could have done it without” the Children’s Investment Fund, she said.
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2013/10/16/08facilities.h33.html?r=782168067

SourceEducation Week

Bond Funding from the Legislature to Build Better Spaces for Children

September 10, 2013
Bond Funding from the Legislature to Build Better Spaces for Children
by Alyssa Haywoode
The Children’s Investment Fund has been shepherding proposed legislation through the State House that would create bond funding to build or improve early childhood education (ECE) and out-of-school time (OST) spaces.
“The MA Legislature recently passed a bill authorizing bond financing for capital improvements,” the Fund said in a recent email. This is money that will go to nonprofit early childhood and afterschool centers. “While we continue working with a coalition of supporters to get the bill through the conference committee, signed and eventually funded, we want to help get projects ready for funding.”
A substantial need
As the Fund says on its website, “space matters: there is substantial research on the importance of the physical environment on children’s social, emotional and cognitive development.”
The need is considerable, as the Fund found in a survey of ECE and OST programs located across the state. A report of this work – “Building an Infrastructure for Quality: An Inventory of Early Childhood Education and Out-of-School Time Facilities in Massachusetts” — sheds light on a host of problems, including ceiling holes, poor air quality, inadequate heating and cooling systems, and inadequate play spaces. An executive summary is available here. To download the full report register here.
We wrote about the Fund’s efforts last year and again this summer in June.
Information sessions coming soon
To get the word out about the bond funding, the Children’s Investment Fund is sponsoring information sessions that will also cover Building Stronger Centers, “a unique training program on capital planning for ECE and OST facilities.”
According to the Fund, “The information sessions will cover the selection criteria for the training, describe the program and answer your questions.” Three sessions will be held on:
– Thursday, September 19, 1:00 – 3:00 pm, at the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley in Boston
– Tuesday, September 24, 10:00 am – noon, at the United Way of Pioneer Valley in Springfield
– Wednesday, September 25, 10:00 am – noon, at the United Way of Central Massachusetts in Worcester
The Fund then plans to select up to 20 providers to participate in the three-and-a-half day “Building Strong Centers” training program, which covers “how to design, finance and manage a major capital project.” The program is designed for organizations that plan to make physical plant improvements in the next two to three years. Selection is based on project readiness. (Not ready this year? Don’t worry. Next year, the Fund will pick another group of participants.)
The Fund runs the training program and brings in experts. So participants will hear from a project manager, an architect, and from organizations that have successfully completed their own projects.
The training program will take place October 15 and November 13-15, 2013, followed by “twelve months of technical assistance, a peer learning network, and access to financing as your project develops.”
Physical spaces can be a “third teacher” for children, Mav Pardee the Fund’s program manager says in this video.
Pardee adds, “Our notions of quality are just too narrow.” She’s right. Instead of making do with mediocre spaces, our children deserve high-quality learning environments.

URL: http://eyeonearlyeducation.com/2013/09/10/bond-funding-from-the-legislature-to-build-better-spaces-for-children/

SourceEye on Early Education blog

Worcester Child Care Nonprofits Get Grants

August 13, 2013

Worcester Child Care Nonprofits Get Grants
Jacquelyn Gutc
Two Worcester-based organizations recently received funding for repairs and renovations from the Children’s Investment Fund (CIF).
CIF has awarded $50,000 in Facilities Improvement Grants each to Webster Square Day Care Center Inc. and the Guild of St. Agnes.
According to the CIF, the Guild of St. Agnes, a 100-year-old private, nonprofit childcare and education center, will replace its heating ventilation and air conditioning systems, leading to cost savings.
Webster Square will upgrade 4,000 square feet of outdoor play space to meet new safety standards at its facility on Main Street. CIF said the 61 children to attend the day care center haven’t been able to use part of the play area because it doesn’t meet safety standards for surfacing under play equipment.

Copyright 2013 New England Business Media
URL: http://www.wbjournal.com/article/20130813/NEWS01/130819983

SourceWorcester Business Journal

Day care centers receive funding

Sunday, August 11, 2013
Day care centers receive funding

WORCESTER — Two local day care centers have each received a $50,000 grant for repairs and renovations from the Boston-based Children’s Investment Fund.

The Webster Square Day Care Center on Main Street will use the money to upgrade 4,000 square feet of outdoor play space to meet new safety standards for surfaces under play equipment, and the Guild of St. Agnes, which has several day care centers in Worcester, will replace heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems.

The Children’s Investment Fund is affiliated with the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation, a public-private finance agency.

© 2013 Worcester Telegram & Gazette Corp.
URL: http://www.telegram.com/article/20130811/NEWS/308119985/1002/business

SourceWorcester Telegram

State House Bills Could Improve Early Education Spaces

June 19, 2013
State House Bills Could Improve Early Education Spaces
by Alyssa Haywoode
In 2011, a report from the Children’s Investment Fund (CIF) revealed the substandard conditions of some early childhood and out-of-school time buildings and facilities in Massachusetts.
One photograph in the report shows a big hole in the ceiling with dirty pink insulation hanging out. In another photograph a leaky toilet stands on a badly stained concrete floor. A third photo shows children playing in an empty parking lot.
We wrote about the report — “Building an Infrastructure for Quality: An Inventory of Early Childhood and Out-of-School time Facilities in Massachusetts” – in a blog entry posted here.
According to Marty Cowden, CIF’s associate program manager, one repeated reaction to the report’s worst findings has been “Oh my goodness, I’d never send my child to a place like that.”
For early education and out-of-school time providers the economic reality can be painful. “The poor condition of the facilities is a resource issue, not the result of providers’ lack of understanding or concern. Providers that serve our highest-need children are squeezed financially – subsidy rates and parent fees don’t cover their operating costs, so they have no cash reserves to renovate or build space that truly supports children’s healthy development and learning,” according to Mav Pardee, CIF’s program manager.
Fortunately, there will be State House action on this issue. Hearings will be held tomorrow on bills that would invest as much as $45 million over five years in bond funding for loans or grants to improve these spaces.
What the Report Found
Researchers examined conditions in 130 licensed sites in Massachusetts, including 73 early education settings and 57 out-of-school-time sites. They were located in a range of settings from community centers and former schools to religious settings and buildings that are entirely dedicated to serving children. Some programs owned spaces, others leased. An executive summary is available here. To download the full report register here.
The relatively good news in the report is that nearly all sites met:
­ 80 percent of 76 regulatory standards
­ 50 percent of 60 professional standards
­ 50 percent of 132 best practice standards.
The bad news is that the report found an array of problems including building code violations, bad indoor air quality, inadequate heating and cooling systems, entrapment hazards in play equipment, and inadequate plays spaces. A finding of particular concern is that only one program site was fully accessible to children with special needs; and that site had been built a year before the site inventory was conducted. Other buildings had been granted waivers.
The challenge is clear, according to a policy paper on facilities released by the National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER). States “need to simultaneously address two policy goals: building the supply of facilities and making sure these spaces are designed to support programmatic quality.”
Bills in the State House
Working with the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley and the Citizens’ Housing and Planning Association, CIF supports three bills with similar language that are pending in the State House. A fact sheet is available here. The three bills are:
An Act Financing the Production and Preservation of Housing for Low and Moderate Income Residents that was filed by Representative Kevin G. Honan (D-Brighton) and Senator James B. Eldridge (D-Acton). This is a housing bond bill that would also set up an “Early Education and Out of School Time Capital Fund” to make grants or loans to eligible programs so they could buy, design, build, repair, renovate or rehab a facility. The bill passed in the House on June 5, and it will be heard on Thursday afternoon in a hearing held by the Senate Committee on Bonding, Capital Expenditures and State Assets. CIF’s Mav Pardee, program will testify at the hearing along with Vanessa Calderón-Rosado, CEO of Inquilinos Boricuas en Acción, a community-building agency, and Sheri Adlin from South Shore Stars, which provides early education and youth programs.
At this hearing, Pardee plans to point out that high-quality facilities:
­ benefit children
­ help create healthy, vibrant neighborhoods
­ provide high-quality options for working parents
­ and help close the achievement gap
In the House, Representative Jeffrey Sanchez (D-Jamaica Plain) filed an Act Relative to Early Education & Out of School Time Capital Fund. It would allot $45 million to create a capital fund to finance grants and loans. It will be heard by the Joint Committee on Education on Thursday morning. CIF plans to submit written testimony. Strategies for Children will also be testifying in support of this bill and the housing bond bill.
In the Senate, an Act Establishing an Early Education and Out-of-School Time Capital Fund, filed by Senator Sal N. DiDomenico (D-Everett), would also create a $45 million “Early Education and Out of School Time Capital Fund” to provide loans or grants. This bill has already had a hearing.
Advocacy Opportunities
Massachusetts residents, please contact the Joint Committee on Education and the Senate Committee on Bonding, Capital Expenditures and State Assets to let legislators know that you support bond funding to finance better early education and out-of-school time spaces.

URL: http://eyeonearlyeducation.com/2013/06/19/state-house-bills-could-improve-early-education-spaces

SourceEye on Early Education: A blog of Strategies for Children, Inc.