Just two years ago, Indiana finally became the 42nd state to offer direct state aid for preschool tuition to poor children, and business leaders say they are lining up behind a big push to enroll even more children.
A group of companies and community organizations announced a campaign, āAll IN 4 Pre-K,ā aimed at raising awareness of the need for quality preschool and urging lawmakers to back their plan for a bigger state program.
āThe reality remains too few students have access to high-quality pre-K in our state,ā said United Way CEO Ann Murtlow. āThousands of children remain unserved because their parents canāt afford the cost of quality programs, and they were unsuccessful in the limited lottery.ā
In 2014, Gov. Mike Pence helped push through a small pilot program in five counties. Preschool advocates celebrated and have pushed since for the state to spend more money on preschool. But expansion efforts have so far fallen flat.
The group gathered Aug. 12 at an Early Learning Indiana-run preschool just north of downtown and promised a big push to make it happen when the Indiana General Assembly returns for the 2017 session in January.
Partners will āencourage the General Assembly to take bold action to expand preschool in a targeted way that focuses on low-income kids and high-quality programs,ā Murtlow said.
Murtlow and others stopped short of calling for universal preschool that would enroll any Hoosier child for free. Democratic candidate for governor John Gregg and Glenda Ritz, the state superintendent, have called for universal preschool and argued the state can afford it, even at a cost of as much as $150 million.
The Republican candidate for governor, Lt. Gov. Eric Holcomb, also voiced support for expanded preschool when he was nominated by the Indiana GOP last month.
But concerns from Republican legislators, who dominate both houses of the Indiana legislature, that the program could prove even more costly in the long run, and some skepticism about the long-term value of state-funded preschool, have lowered expectations that such a program could win enough support to pass.
There are spaces for as many as 3,000 more children in highly rated preschools, Murtlow said, which have gone unfilled because families cannot afford the cost.
During the announcement, retiring Eli Lilly and Company CEO John Lechleiter and his wife, Sarah, pledged $5 million to be matched with another $5 million from the company to support preschool for poor children. Some of the money will be used for direct scholarships to students to help fill empty spaces in highly rated preschools. The money will also fund efforts to help those preschools expand to serve even more students.
After the stateās pilot program, On My Way Pre-K, was launched, the City of Indianapolis launched its own program the following year. Both of those programs have attracted far more applicants than scholarships available.