Our Agenda

right from the start

2024 RIght Start Agenda

With large state budget surpluses for the past two years, increased federal support for early childhood programs, and a strong economy, now is the time for Rhode Island to invest in building strong systems to make the state the best place to have a family. Rhode Island needs state budget investments and policies that help ensure ALL Rhode Island babies and young children, regardless of zip code, race, ethnicity, or family income, get off to the right start in life!

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(Diaz H-5193/ Cano S-522): Restore $48 million in state funding and use the $4 million in new federal funding to pass the RI Child Care is Essential Act so that all families at or below the State Median Income can receive help paying for child care, all provider rates for the RI Child Care Assistance Program meet or exceed federal standards, and the outdated and inequitable child support enforcement requirement is removed.

(McNamara H-6009 / Gallo S-463 & Governor’s Budget Proposal H-5200): Restore and provide $6.5 million in state funding for Head Start and Early Head Start programs statewide while also investing $7 million to sustain the RI Pre-K program. Increase teaching staff wages to match similarly qualified K-12 teacher wages. There are currently 40 RI Pre-K classrooms, 30 Head Start classrooms, and 11 Early Head Start classrooms at risk of permanent closure by July 2023. Read full fact sheet here.

(Giraldo H-5810 / Valverde S-207): Make the long-needed (22 years!) rate increase permanent for the Rhode Island First Connections newborn home visiting program to prevent program collapse. Develop a plan to sustain and expand voluntary family home visiting services, including meeting the new state funding requirements, so that high-quality programs are offered to all families who could benefit.

(Casimiro H-5094 / Cano S-492 & Diaz H-6169 / DiMario S-377): Pass the RI Early Educator Investment Act to establish statewide compensation goals for early educators. Fund the Child Care WAGE$ pilot program to increase compensation for skilled child care educators. Implement Kentucky’s strategy to recruit and retain child care educators by providing all child care educators with categorical eligibility to the RI Child Care Assistance Program, regardless of family income. The workforce that supports young children’s early learning and development is made up almost exclusively of women (and disproportionately women of color) and has among the lowest wages in the state @ $13.26 per hour for child care and @ $14.08 per hour for preschool – in the same range or lower than fast food workers, dishwashers, laundry workers, animal caretakers, and retail sales workers.

(Diaz H-#### / DiMario S-377) implements a strategy developed in Kentucky to attract and retain child care educators by providing categorical eligibility to the Child Care Assistance Program for all child care staff regardless of family income and with no copayments.

(Giraldo H-5983 / Gallo S-523) sets aside up to 10 Wavemaker Fellowships for Speech Language Pathologists, Occupational Therapists, and Physical Therapists working in Early Intervention, with priority for bilingual professionals.

(Kazarian H-5781 / Lawson S-139 & Diaz H-5447 / Miller S-XXX): Increase the wage replacement level so all parents, and especially lower wage-earning parents, can have adequate income to stay home and care for newborns, adoptive, and foster children. Expand the number of weeks offered to families to meet national standards — at least 12 weeks for each parent. Rhode Island was a leader in establishing a paid family leave program in 2013, but we have now fallen behind, offering the lowest wage replacement rate and fewest number of weeks of leave of any state with a paid leave program.

(Slater H-5986 / Lauria S-247): Ensure babies and young children with Medicaid/RIte Care insurance (about 50% of all young children in RI) have consistent access to preventive, specialized, and emergency health care by adopting continuous Medicaid eligibility for all children under age 6. No family should have to worry about whether they can afford to bring their little ones in to see a doctor for checkups, screenings, immunizations, or illness.

(Handy H-5644 / Murray S-227): Almost 2,000 children under age 6 rely on RI Works cash assistance to help meet their basic needs. Adopt RI Works policies recommended by the Raising Rhode Island Coalition by updating the cash assistance benefit annually to ensure children do not live in deep poverty, repealing the full family sanction, allowing pregnant women to receive support earlier, and restoring eligibility to legal permanent residents.

(Alzate H-6148, Murray S-232): Pass the Revenue for Rhode Island Act, a fair share tax strategy, that will bring in much-needed revenue to invest in K-12 education, child care and early learning programs, and transportation infrastructure to help get more people to work.