Biden Wants To Wrap Preschools in Red Tape
“Free” preschool will cost the government a lot of money.

COVID-19 lockdowns and school closures that don't account for local conditions have served as a useful reminder that universal one-size-fits-all policies are generally not the best solutions. Now the Biden administration is applying similar one-size-fits-all logic to his universal pre-K plan.
After a year and a half of cyclical government-mandated school and daycare closures, many parents are desperate for relief. They may think any help is better than no help, but President Joe Biden is proposing an inflexible model that will drive up childcare costs and result in less variety among preschools.
Under the Biden plan, states will only be able to give federal funds to preschool programs that offer at least 1,020 hours of instruction annually. That is more hours than most states require for children in K-12 schools. In my home state of Pennsylvania, 900 hours is considered full-time for elementary school; for high school, it's 990 hours. Oregon, Massachusetts, Idaho, New Hampshire, Utah, and Virginia similarly top out at 990 hours. Some states are even lower. Requiring more hours annually than high schools must offer is a ridiculous mandate to put on a pre-K program. Preschool is meant to be a bridge toward full-time school. Parents who don't want a full-time preschool program are not served well by Biden's plan.
Biden's universal pre-K plan will drive up teaching costs since it mandates that pay for preschool teachers be equivalent to elementary school teachers' salaries, provided they have similar credentials and experience. Elementary school salaries vary across districts. Will private providers have to match their salary scale to the local union-dominated public school's salary scale? This is essentially putting prevailing wage rules on preschool programs, and will unnecessarily drive up costs.
The "free" nature of the Biden plan will also increase costs by increasing demand among parents who otherwise wouldn't be interested in full-time preschool. If their choices are to pay for a program with fewer hours or get one with more hours at no cost, many will choose the "free" one even if they would have ordinarily preferred another option. We already see this play out in K-12 schools; polls show only 40 percent of parents would choose their assigned district school if they could afford other options, but 80 percent of students attend traditional public schools.
Any state that signs up for the Biden plan needs to realize state taxpayers will be responsible for these new programs when the federal money runs out. The federal reimbursement for the universal preschool program drops to 64 percent in 2027—and then to zero soon after. So the Biden plan will create a new bureaucracy, increase preschool costs, provide partial funding for a few years, and then state taxpayers will be facing massive new costs as far as the eye can see.
Not only will state taxpayers be left with the tab, but parents will also be left with programs that aren't flexible enough to meet their needs. And to what end? New research from Nobel Prize-winning economist James Heckman reinforces the case for targeted, rather than universal, social service programs. "More advantaged families are better able to access, utilize, and influence universally available programs," Heckman and co-author Rasmus Landersø wrote in a March 2020 working paper. These advantages don't go away with universal provision, so these programs may worsen inequality. Heckman finds targeted programs to be more effective at reducing inequality.
But the U.S. government doesn't have the best track record with targeted programs. Consider the Head Start preschool program, which is expected to be the model for Biden's plan according to Tommy Sheridan, deputy director of the National Head Start Association. The most comprehensive Head Start study, released by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services in 2012, found the program had little or no impact on student outcomes by 3rd grade—despite costing more than $7 billion per year at the time ($7,900 per participant).
No doubt "free" preschool sounds appealing to parents with young children, but they should be careful what they wish for. Throughout the country, there are contentious school board meetings and political races showing how impossible it is to satisfy everyone with a universal program.
On the bright side, K-12 education choice is flourishing in the face of this parental frustration. So far this year, 18 states have enacted new education choice programs or expanded existing ones. Many of these have been educational savings accounts (ESAs), which are the most flexible form of education choice, allowing parents to use taxpayer funds for various educational needs like tutoring, tuition, and services for students with special needs. It would be a tragic irony if preschool became mired in bureaucratic mandates and federal involvement right as parents are gaining access to more K-12 options.
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Let’s Go Brandon
Yeah, let's go, Brandon!
I saw somebody the other day say they felt sorry for every parent with a kid in little league named Brandon.
I suspect it's going to be an unpopular name for newborns for the next couple of years.
Brandon is the new Karen
Man, I feel bad for people named Karen. I know some very nice people named Karen. And a Brandon too.
I feel bad for every man in Florida.
You know who else felt bad about having a name associated with a historic bad guy?
Roberta Flack is far from bad. And not a guy.
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"Free” preschool will cost the government a lot of money.
It's a good thing the government makes a profit. I'd hate to think the taxpayers were paying for this.
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3.5 trillion and it will cost NOTHING. Why isn't Biden getting the Nobel prize for economics?
Yeah. It doesn’t pass the smell test.
They're miffed that they can't give it to President Lizzie or President Bernie. But they are looking forward to President Occasional-Cortex.
Preschool red tape? Whatever.
Biden has eliminated the most egregious red tape of all. I'm talking about Orange Hitler's policy of "border enforcement" that prevented billionaire employers (like Reason.com's benefactor Charles Koch) from importing cost-effective foreign-born labor.
#LibertariansForBiden
#ImmigrationAboveAll
Why does the face on the little girl who's reaching out look photoshopped?
Because Monkey Business Images just HAS to be racist?
>>Monkey Business
Gary Hart was a badass.
total shopped.
Recolored to make her lighter.
This may finally start the process of states refusing to "join" federal programs. A faint beginning was made with the Medicare expansion, and this will just give more states an incentive to run the cost analysis out a few decades and just say "NO!"
Ask crack dealers why they willingly give out a "free taste" to new customers.
They're trying to "fix" the Medicaid gap because some states had the option and did not expand Medicaid.
There won't be an "option" on the next massive federal program. They're only "pro-choice" when it involves abortions.
One of the most interesting stories of the year, with layers upon layers of meaning and interpretation. And I'm linking to a "sympathetic" news source.
So you have a judge here who's upset that despite months of media and government propaganda, all they can charge the "January 6 attackers with" is misdemeanor disturbing the peace and other related charges.
Basically, this judge is herself a dupe of the propaganda. She's bought into the messaging of CNN, MSNBC and Justice Department, and she's pissed off that the lie is crumbling before her eyes.
Funny that. Very... very funny that.
partisan judges are the worst kind of all.
Meh. Grandstanding judge has a defendant who didn't do much, and won't get a better chance to be quoted in the press.
I expect she, and other law & order types, will be happier with outcomes once the "rotten apples" come to trial. According to DOJ, they've charged 120+ people with some form of assault. Anything involving a LEO is going to get special attention. With all the cameras rolling that day - and idiots posting their acts to social media - some of the folks facing real charges are going to get skewered real hard.
Howell will say it wasn't enough, proving once again leftists loves them some collectivized punishment.
What reputation does she think the is has
cheaper to close the conformity factories.
Why do you hate little black and brown children so much?
Because I am a racist.
Every democrat says so, just by looking at my skin.
So I may as well be one.
The funny thing is that quoting Rev. Martin Luther King is being a white supremacist.
I love throwing King at the woke.
Stop with the top down one size fits all solutions already.
And the CONSTITUTIONAL Authority to monopolize preschool?????
Ya; F-OFF Nazi's.
The general welfare clause; generally, it's welfare for the teacher unions.
It's the Taxing clause --- for the "General Welfare of the United States" Government. As-if taxation wasn't exactly that.
There is no "General Welfare" clause only leftards who pick-up phrases and takes them COMPLETELY out of context and pretends they can mean whatever they want them to mean.
Pretending "General Welfare" in the taxing clause has anything to do with the people is like pretending the government has the duty to "pay" everyone's "Debts" off...................
There are two aspects of the universal pre-K movement that have not be fully researched and discussed. First is the necessary union participation of the pre-K teachers when the pre-K is under the aegis of local school districts. Second is the almost certain mandatory Ed degree, bachelor's or associate's, which will fill the coffers of Ed schools who are suffering declining enrollments. This means that Ed schools will decide how the pre-K teachers should teach and what and how they should tech the children. Since Ed schools are to blame for the sorry state of public education, this does not bode well for the future.
There are two aspects of the universal pre-K movement that have not been fully researched and discussed. First is the necessary union participation of the pre-K teachers when the pre-K is under the aegis of local school districts. Second is the almost certain mandatory Ed degree, bachelor's or associate's, which will fill the coffers of Ed schools who are suffering declining enrollments. This means that Ed schools will decide how the pre-K teachers should teach and what they should teach the children. Since Ed schools are to blame for the sorry state of public education, this does not bode well for the future.
Oh, my, fuck that guy.
The federal government should be no where near any education. And people should not be incentivized to not take care of their own young children. I get that some people have little choice in the matter. But I can't accept that having your kids in the hands of the state for 8-10 hours a day from age 4-18 is a good thing, even in less insane times.
Reality check; baby sitters do not need degrees.
Are there any existing (blue) states with a comparable universal pre-K program hour requirement? I.e. who stands to gain from this particular federal trough? It sounds idiotic, and a blind investment in "the children," so I'm thinking... Massachusetts.
That's Brandon. He's got his head so far up the ass of the teacher's unions that he tastes their food before they do.
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