Pritzker signs bill creating new Department of Early Childhood
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[June 26, 2024]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker signed legislation Tuesday creating a new
cabinet-level state agency dedicated to early childhood education and
development.
The new Department of Early Childhood, which will become operational in
July 2026, will take over programs currently housed across three state
agencies, including funding for preschool programs, child care centers
and the licensing of day care centers.
Speaking at a bill signing ceremony at a preschool in Chicago, Pritzker
said the streamlined agency should make it easier for new parents to
access critical services for their children.
“It's hard enough juggling all the responsibilities that fall on the
shoulders of parents,” he said. “And on top of that, they shouldn't have
to navigate a complex bureaucracy to get the care that they and their
children deserve.”
Pritzker first unveiled his plan for a consolidated agency last fall,
just as lawmakers were beginning their annual fall veto session, when he
issued an executive order establishing an Office of Early Childhood
within the governor’s office.
That order directed the Department of Human Services, the Department of
Children and Family Services, and the Illinois State Board of Education
to begin working on a transition plan to move the administration of
their early childhood programs into a new agency.
The formal bid to establish the new agency was part of Pritzker’s budget
proposal to the General Assembly in February, along with a second year
of increased funding for those programs under Pritzker’s Smart Start
initiative.
Under the plan, the new agency will take over the Early Childhood Block
Grant program from the State Board of Education, which funds the
Preschool for All and Prevention Initiative programs; the Child Care
Assistance Program, Home Visiting programs, and Early Intervention
Services currently housed in the Department of Human Services; and
licensing of day care facilities, which is currently managed by the
Department of Children and Family Services.
The legislation authorizing the new agency, Senate Bill 1, passed
unanimously in the Senate in April, and last month passed with
bipartisan support in the House, 93-18.
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A chalkboard welcome sign for Gov. JB Pritzker inside Eyes On The
Future Child Development Center in Chicago’s far north side
neighborhood of Rogers Park. Pritzker signed Senate Bill 1 there,
which will create the framework for a new state agency geared
towards early childhood development. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Dilpreet Raju)
“The foundation of a child’s success and well-being is built starting
the moment they are born,” Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford,
D-Maywood, the lead Senate sponsor of the bill, said in a statement. “As
a state, it is our duty to provide the necessary support and resources
to build such stability. The creation of this unique agency will break
ground on our transition to a whole, trauma-informed approach to meeting
children’s diverse needs.”
Much of the debate over the bill in the legislature focused on the cost
of launching a new state agency. Lawmakers appropriated $14 million in
the upcoming fiscal year for initial startup costs, which include such
things as hiring executive staff and opening new office space.
But administration officials were reluctant to provide estimates of how
much the new agency would cost annually once it’s fully operational, and
whether those administrative costs would outweigh what the state is
spending currently.
Responding to questions from reporters Tuesday, Pritzker again declined
to offer specific cost estimates but suggested consolidating the
programs into a single agency could result in efficiencies and cost
savings. But he did chide “people who want to complain” about how new
state agencies will “cost...taxpayers.”
“I really don't think it will,” Pritzker said. “I think there's real
efficiency and taking programs that are desperately located in different
departments and bringing them all together.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of
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the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation,
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and Southern Illinois Editorial Association.
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