Administration for Children and Family releases $750 million in Emergency Funding to Head Start Programs

Author

Image of Rachel-Mackey_v2.png

Rachel Mackey

Legislative Director – Human Services & Education | Veterans & Military Services

Upcoming Events

Related News

Image of GettyImages-1133921273.jpg

Key Takeaways

On June 4, the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) released $750 million in emergency funding for Head Start and Early Head Start provided by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act. Head Start, which is federally funded and operated by a variety of local grantees—including county governments—targets children under 5 from low-income families with comprehensive programming to meet their emotional, social, health, nutritional, and psychological needs and bolster school readiness. Congress provided the supplemental funding to help Head Start and Early Head Start agencies undertake preventative, preparedness, and response activities related to the coronavirus.

County governments often play an important role in the operation of Head Start and Early Head Start programs, whether by serving as one of the nation’s 1,600 local grantees and/or contributing funding to the Head Start program’s non-federal match requirement. As with many other functions, the operation of Head Start and Early Head Start by county governments and other local grantees has changed dramatically due to COVID-19, with many agencies ceasing in-person activities but continuing to pay staff and provide virtual programming for enrolled families. Other sites have continued to serve children or are beginning to reopen and must adapt their programs to adhere to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and local health guidance.

To support these activities and provide maximum flexibility to local program offices dealing with the uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Office of Head Start (OHS), the ACF bureau which oversees the Head Start program, is distributing the additional funding directly to the each local program based on last year’s enrollment figures. The decision to directly allocate funds is a shift from the Agency’s initial guidance, which would have required grantees to apply for the emergency funds. had been published with information for applying to funding. However, the uncertainty of safely opening local program offices has led ACF to distribute funds as one-time funding by formula based on each grantee's funded enrollment.

The funding will be released on a rolling basis throughout the month of June.

NACo will continue to monitor CARES Act funds and other COVID-19 related legislation and to advocate for Congress to provide  adequate funding for comprehensive programs such as Head Start/Early Head Start, to ensure that needed educational, nutritional, and social services are available to disadvantaged pre-school children.

Additional Resources:

Image of GettyImages-1133921273.jpg

Tagged In:

Attachments

Related News

Betsy Keller, El Paso County, Texas’s chief administrator, and Irene Gutierrez, executive director of the county’s Community Services Department, in March introduce members of the NACo Immigration Reform Task Force to El Paso County Migrant Support Services Center. Photo by Charlie Ban
County News

El Paso County, Texas helps migrants on their way

Though they don't often stay more than a day, asylum seekers receive care and services from El Paso County, Texas before they leave for their next destination.

AIhomelessness
County News

L.A. County fends off homelessness with an assist from A.I.

A predictive model pulls data from six county departments to create a list of the county’s most vulnerable population — people who frequently show up in the county’s criminal justice and hospital systems and who access benefits like SNAP.