Research shows early childhood education has positive impacts on children’s health, cognition and more.?(Photo by Rebecca Rivas/Missouri Independent)
FRANKFORT — Kentucky’s largest city took steps Tuesday to implement universal, free and optional preschool for its 3- and 4-year-old citizens.?
Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg announced that a new nonprofit called Thrive by 5 Louisville will work over the next five years with both public and private dollars to get children in the city better prepared for kindergarten by providing grants to providers and assistance to families.?
To kick this off, Greenberg said he will be asking Metro Council in his April budget proposal for funding in the “high seven figures.”?
Greenberg is also hopeful state, federal and private philanthropic dollars will help make the vision a reality. Gov. Andy Beshear proposed in his December budget that the state spend $172 million to begin funding universal preschool for Kentucky’s 4-year-olds.?
Thrive by 5, separate from the Louisville government, will work in these phases, Greenberg announced:?
In statements Tuesday, several Louisville lawmakers praised Greenberg’s plan.?
Republican Sen. Julie Raque-Adams said it “will benefit our kids, our workforce and our economy.”?
“Louisville’s children deserve the best and by supporting early learning we increase their chance at long-term success,” said Raque-Adams.?
Democrat Rep. Josie Raymond said that “early childhood education is the best solution we have to disrupt cycles of generational poverty and create opportunity.”??
Thrive by 5 will be overseen by a board of directors, which Ashley Novak Butler, the executive director of the Lift a Life Novak Family Foundation, will chair.?
She said Tuesday that she wants to “strengthen our current early learning ecosystem while working to build additional resources needed to create access to high quality learning environments for children.”??
Research shows early childhood education has positive impacts on children’s health, cognition and more.?
Louisville Metro Council member Phillip Baker, said that universal pre-kindergarten “embodies the very essence of progress and equality.”?
“Imagine a future where every child in Louisville, regardless of their background, regardless of their circumstance, has access to high quality early childhood education,” he said. “Picture the potential, the possibilities that unfold when we invest in the youngest leaders and learners. This is not merely a dream. It’s a vision that we all in this room and outside this room can turn into a reality.”??
The investment is costly but worth it, he said.?
“Some may say, ‘how do we afford such an ambitious endeavor?’” he said. “To them I (say), ‘how can we afford not to?’”?
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