By Forum Staff
Mayor Eric Adams and leadership of the City Council on Thursday announced a historic joint effort to strengthen early childhood education across the five boroughs and address longstanding systemic issues, while boosting enrollment and connecting families with more Pre-K and 3-K seats.
The strategic plan – developed by an unprecedented joint Adams administration-Council working group, chaired by Deputy Mayor for Strategic Initiatives Ana J. Almanzar and Speaker Adams – will be anchored by $100 million in new city investment allocated in the Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 Adopted Budget to implement an action-oriented roadmap for outreach and seat allocation across the city. With the new $100 million investment, the total investment in the FY25 city budget for early childhood education is $3 billion, comprised of $2 billion for early childhood education programming for children aged zero to five and approximately $1 billion for preschool special education.
To continue building on this success and accomplish a comprehensive re-imagining of the early childhood education system in New York City, the Adams administration and the City Council have created a 10-point plan that will be executed by New York City Public Schools, the Mayor’s Office of Child Care and Early Childhood Education and multiple city agencies, in partnership with the Council to:
- Increasing 3-K Access for Families This School Year
The Adams administration committed to ensuring all children who applied for 3-K for the 2024-2025 school year will have access to a high-quality early childhood education seat and has delivered on that commitment. To accomplish this goal, the city added $20 million in the FY25 Adopted Budget to immediately meet the needs of families. Within weeks, New York City Public Schools expanded 3-K capacity to more than 1,500 additional seats in the specific zip codes across several districts in which families did not receive an initial offer. With the passage of the adopted budget, 100 percent of families that initially didn’t receive a 3-K offer now have received one.
- Expanding Family Outreach Strategy
Lacking access to resources about the availability of early childhood education and how to apply is a major barrier to entry for many families. To directly address this access-gap, the Adams administration and the City Council have invested a total of $5 million for an outreach effort to maximize the number of children enrolled in 3-K and Pre-K. The effort conducts targeted outreach to communities with under-enrollment and bring resources directly to communities. Launched in July 2024, this comprehensive outreach plan will leverage partnerships with community partners and community-based organizations to facilitate direct engagement with families and provide hands-on enrollment support.
- Increasing Preschool Special Education Classrooms
The Adams administration will continue to increase preschool special education classrooms to ensure early childhood education across New York City is inclusive of all children. In 2022, the Adams administration announced a historic contract enhancement and committed to creating 800 preschool special education seats, which grew to over 900. New York City Public Schools increased teacher pay for this critical sector at a time when it was suffering due to underinvestment and difficulty hiring staff, which resulted in stabilizing over 6,500 seats.
This investment will be sustained and further expanded with a historic commitment of $122 million. This includes baselining $67 million for preschool contract enhancements for community-based organizations and the addition of $55 million in new city funds for New York City Public Schools to expand hundreds of preschool special education seats across district schools for the 2024-2025 school year. This fall, 450 additional special education seats will be available with the goal of reaching 700 throughout the school year.
- Providing Free Extended Hours of Early Childhood Education for Children and Their Families
Extended day offerings eliminate multiple barriers for parents to maintain employment or further their education while their child is in a safe, high-quality environment later into the evening. That is why the FY24 Adopted Budget baselined $15 million for New York City Public Schools to launch the first-ever pilot, providing funding to give over 1,700 families the opportunity to access free extended hours of 3-K and Pre-K in their own communities. The pilot includes communities with the highest economic need index and where there is limited or no extended day programming. Now, this effort will be propelled by $25 million more , bringing the total investment to $40 million and the opportunity to provide access to thousands of families.
- Expanding Support for Undocumented Children Through Promise NYC
The Adams administration and the City Council will continue to support undocumented children and their families who are not eligible for state- and federally-subsidized child care due to their immigration status by expanding Promise NYC, from $16 million in FY24 to $25 million in FY25. Launched in January 2023, the program contracts with four community-based organizations to help families across all five boroughs access and afford child care. Within three months of its launch, Promise NYC had surpassed its initial goal of enrolling 600 children. The additional funds will allow approximately 1,000 children to enroll in child care through Promise NYC.
- Funding the Mayor’s Office of Child Care and Early Childhood Education
The Adams administration will provide sustainable funding of approximately $485,000 for three additional staff members in the Mayor’s Office of Child Care and Early Childhood Education, which is charged with coordinating early childhood education efforts across the city and executing on this 10-point plan. Funding for this office was previously provided by philanthropic dollars.
- Providing Deeper Support for Child Care and Early Childhood Education Providers and Programs
The Mayor’s Office of Child Care and Early Childhood Education will ensure a holistic approach to child care and early childhood education policy in New York City through collaborative strategy and planning with city agencies. The Mayor’s Office of Child Care and Early Childhood Education will create formal mechanisms for cross-agency collaboration and accountability, and convene agencies to tackle emerging cross-agency issues and plan long-term strategies for the child care sector. Using feedback and input from child care and early childhood providers, the Mayor’s Office of Child Care and Early Childhood Education will work with city agencies to review, assess, and streamline city polices and processes to make it easier for child care providers to sustain their operations and thrive.
- Establishing the “Child Care Advisory Group”
Delivering on a key priority outlined in Mayor Adams’ “Accessible, Equitable, High-Quality, Affordable: A Blueprint for Child Care and Early Childhood Education in New York City,” the Mayor’s Office of Child Care and Early Childhood Education will establish the “Child Care Advisory Group,” comprised of providers, parents, key early childhood stakeholders, and city agencies that work in partnership with the administration to ultimately deliver accessible, high-quality child care across the city. The advisory group – which was established in July 2024 –works with the Adams administration to ensure alignment with provider and family priorities and needs, provide input on the design of new strategies, and support planning and implementation of key policies.
- Convening Bi-Weekly Meetings Between the Adams Administration and the City Council
To execute this plan and address long-standing challenges across the complex and dynamic early childhood education system, the Adams administration and City Council will hold bi-weekly meetings, chaired by Deputy Mayor Almanzar and Speaker Adams, that includes members of the City Council, participants from the Office of Management and Budget, New York City Public Schools, and the Office of the Chief of Staff to Mayor Adams. The outside of these meetings to coordinate efforts and information-sharing across city agencies.
- Ensuring City Agencies Have the Staff and Resources to Support the Infrastructure of the City’s Early Childhood Education System
The Adams administration and City agencies will work together to ensure adequate and sufficient staffing structures that are integral to the sustainability and growth of the city’s early childhood system. This includes staff and resources working on subsidy applications determinations, enrollment into vacant child care seats, background checks, health and safety, and training and technical assistance supports for early childhood programs.