in

$4.5B taxpayer-funded NY plan for pre-K not enough for LI ‘childcare deserts’: Dem pol

$4.5b-taxpayer-funded-ny-plan-for-pre-k-not-enough-for-li-‘childcare-deserts’:-dem-pol
$4.5B taxpayer-funded NY plan for pre-K not enough for LI ‘childcare deserts’: Dem pol

Gov. Kathy Hochul’s move to spend a staggering $4.5 billion in taxpayer dough on childcare and pre-Ks is far too little to address Long Island’s “childcare desert,’’ according to a local Dem pol.

State Assemblywoman Michaelle Solages, who represents Nassau County, unveiled a proposal last week for additional spending to kick-start elite universal childcare and pre-K on Long Island before the state’s goal of 2028.

“Our ask is very simple — we want to increase UPK [universal pre-K] capacity on Long Island, increase funding, invest more than a million dollars to expand [the Long Island Regional Technical Assistance Center],” which is a key resource for school districts and local providers, Solages said. 

Official portrait of New York Assembly member Michaelle Solages.

Democratic state Assemblywoman Michaelle Solages of Long Island says Gov. Kathy Hochul’s $4.5 billion taxpayer-funded pre-K and childcare plan is not enough to properly address the needs of her region. New York Assembly

“We also want to make sure that we have universality sooner than 2028, our 4-year-olds and our zero-to-3s can’t wait,” the assemblywoman said. 

Education leaders and child-care advocates backed Solages as she called for the state to expand the program’s classroom capacity in areas where demand far outpaces space, commit to spending more than the state’s $10,000-per-pupil minimum, increase child-care subsidies for working families and invest $1 million to help open and sustain new pre-K classrooms as well as fund workforce training to keep schools properly staffed.

Pre-K students in a New York City public school classroom adapting to learning environments during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Education leaders and child care advocates back Solages. Getty Images

The push comes as Gov. Kathy Hochul has made expanded child care and universal pre-K a centerpiece of her 2026 executive budget, pledging roughly $4.5 billion statewide for child care and early education programs this year. 

But Solages argued the state’s baseline funding isn’t enough in high-cost regions outside of New York City — such as Nassau and Suffolk counties — where she said inflation, staffing costs and classroom shortages have driven up expenses and left families on waitlists as enrollment has more than doubled since 2021.

Long Island Regional Technical Assistance Center in Roosevelt, NY.

The Long Island Regional Technical Assistance Center is a key resource for school districts and local providers — and desperately needs more money, Solages said. Google

“We appreciate [Gov. Kathy Hochul] is making a minimum of a $10,000 investment into universal childcare for every student — but in high cost areas like Long Island and the Hudson Valley — that money is spread thin,” Solages said, adding that the state’s promised funding “just meets the basics.

“We need to ensure that the conversation around childcare is just not limited to New York City, that we’re talking about all of the state in a statewide plan.”

Leave a Reply

nj-man-‘sipping-coffee’-as-$5k-robotic-snow-blower-clears-his-driveway-during-winter-storm-fern

NJ man ‘sipping coffee’ as $5K robotic snow blower clears his driveway during Winter Storm Fern

nyc-da-appears-poised-to-try-to-help-free-infamous-pedophile,-critics-claim

NYC DA appears poised to try to help free infamous pedophile, critics claim