Abbott signs bills to improve childcare, early learning programs
The article reports that Texas Governor Greg abbott has signed two bipartisan bills aimed at improving childcare adn early learning programs across the state.These laws focus on streamlining regulations to make childcare more accessible and enhance its quality by cutting bureaucratic red tape.
One bill (HB 117), sponsored by Republican Rep. Alan Schoolcraft and Sen. Donna Campbell, establishes a new task force within the governor’s office to identify and eliminate inefficiencies in childcare and early education governance. The task force aims to create a more uniform pre-K program rather than a patchwork of inconsistent services.
the other bill (HB 4903),filed by Republican Rep. Harris-Davila and Sen. Brian Birdwell, creates the Quad-Agency Childcare Initiative Commission. This commission coordinates efforts among four state agencies responsible for childcare regulations to integrate their decisions, preventing conflicting rules for childcare providers.
both laws received bipartisan support and took effect on June 20. Governor Abbott emphasized the importance of affordable, quality childcare for working parents and employers, highlighting these measures as steps to expand access and improve care in Texas.
Abbott signs bills to improve childcare, early learning programs
(The Center Square) – Gov. Greg Abbott continues to travel throughout the state or host bill signing events in Austin to ceremoniously sign bills to raise awareness about legislation that passed during the regular legislative session.
Two bills Abbott ceremonially signed will streamline childcare regulations to improve childcare and early learning programs, he said.
“Improving access to childcare is so essential for working parents as well as for employers,” Abbott said. The new laws will make it easier to access childcare and improve quality of care, he said, by cutting regulatory red tape among other measures.
“These bipartisan laws are our state’s next step towards establishing affordable, quality childcare for Texans,” he continued. “By removing barriers and streamlining regulations, we will improve childcare availability and expand access for Texas parents.”
HB 117, filed by Republican state Rep. Alan Schoolcraft and Sen. Donna Campbell, creates another task force in the governor’s office, “the Governance of Early Childhood Education and Care.” Task force members are tasked with identifying and eliminating inefficiencies in the administration of childcare and early learning programs across state agencies.
“A good foundation of education has got to be the best that it can be especially pre-K and the first few years,” Campbell said. “Well-educated children become well-educated adults and that keeps Texas strong.”
Aware of criticism of yet another task force created by the legislature, she said this one would ensure efficiency.
“Many people complain about expansive and inefficient government,” she said. “But this task force will look across different silos of education to have a pre-K program that has uniformity rather than a patchwork of inefficient programs, which are always costly. This task force will be for efficiency to have the best pre-K for children.”
HB 4903, filed by Republican state Rep. Harris-Davila and Sen. Brian Birdwell, creates another bureaucratic oversight commission: the Quad-Agency Childcare Initiative Commission. Its goal is to streamline childcare regulations statewide by coordinating efforts among several agencies: the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Health and Human Services Commission, Texas Education Agency, and Texas Workforce Commission.
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The bill requires the four state agencies that oversee childcare regulations “integrate their decisions before they’re sent down to the individual childcare facilities,” Birdwell said. “Instead of the childcare facility asking, ‘how do I follow both of these regulations that are diametrically opposed?’ the bill creates a quad agency childcare initiative to make them coordinate before they send their regulations down through the respective chain.”
Both bills passed with bipartisan support and became effective June 20.
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