Head Start Programs Kept Afloat During Shutdown With Donation
MIAMI (CBSMiami/AP) — A donation will help the National Heat Start Association keep going during the federal government shutdown.
The donation of up to $10 million is from two philanthropists.
Laura and John Arnold's donation will help serve more than 7,000 at-risk children while the government shutdown continues, NHSA officials said in a release. The Arnolds, of Houston, co-chair The Arnold Foundation, a philanthropic organization that was established in 2008. Laura Arnold is an ex-oil company executive and John Arnold is an investor.
Head Start programs in Georgia, Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, South Carolina and Missouri were closed at the end of the first week of the shutdown, NHSA officials said.
The programs —which are run by the Department of Health and Human Services and focus on early education programs for low-income children — have been allocated federal grant funding. However, administrators are temporarily blocked from renewing their funding because of the stalemate in Washington.
"This hasn't really happened since the mid-90s, and I'm not so sure current programs had really thought about this happening before," said Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning spokesman Reg Griffin. "We did everything we could in terms of Georgia's pre-k program to try to reach out and help out in any way we could from an instructional standpoint," Griffin said, adding that staffing issues for the programs are handled on the federal level.
The shutdown is impacting one Gainesville-based nonprofit that serves more than 1,100 Georgia students in more than 50 classrooms throughout northern Georgia, Griffin said. He added that his agency heard stories of hardship from parents who were scrambling to find childcare services that would allow them to stay at work after being told to keep their children at home this week.
National Head Start Association Executive Director Yasmina Vinci called the Arnolds' donation selfless, and said the program is grateful they stepped forward to keep classrooms open.
"The bottom line, however, is that angel investors like the Arnolds cannot possibly offer a sustainable solution to the funding crisis threatening thousands of our poorest children," Vinci said in a statement. "Our elected officials simply must find a fiscal solution that protects, preserves and promotes the promise that quality early learning opportunities like Head Start offer to nearly one million at-risk children each year."
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