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In Michigan鈥檚 UP, a Head Start Preschool Closes. Blame the Government Shutdown

Program offering free preschool for low-income families was among nine statewide that didn鈥檛 get Nov. 1 federal grants as planned.

Nine Michigan Head Start programs missed expected federal payments on Nov. 1. One immediately closed. (Annie Barker for Bridge Michigan)

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After the federal government failed to renew a $1.5 million federal grant by Saturday, officials at the Gogebic-Ontonagon Community Action Agency say they had little choice: They closed a free preschool program that has served two counties in Michigan鈥檚 Upper Peninsula since 1965.

The program was among that missed expected weekend payments because of the ongoing federal government shutdown. Unlike others, the UP program could not secure alternative resources in time to continue operations.

That means 85 students 鈥 along with 30 other families with children in Early Head Start 鈥 won鈥檛 be getting the education, meals and other services they rely on until funding is restored. And employees are currently out of work, program director Renee Pertile told Bridge Michigan.

鈥淲e’re kind of one big family, and now it seems like a piece is missing,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t’s awfully quiet here today.鈥

Funded primarily by the federal government to serve low-income preschoolers and their families, Head Start programs in Michigan and around the country are among the latest to feel direct impacts from the government shutdown that鈥檚 dragged on for more than a month.

Coupled with the recent impacting 1.4 million Michigan residents, advocates warn the ongoing turmoil surrounding federal funding is putting vulnerable kids at risk.

While local schools and community groups can in some cases step in to help keep Head Start programs going, those resources are 鈥渘ot going to be universal, and it’s not going to be a one-to-one replacement,鈥 said Bob McCann, executive director of the K-12 Alliance of Michigan.

鈥淭he longer this goes on, the more damage it’s going to do,鈥 McCann continued. 鈥淭his is a crisis of choice by (politicians), and it’s kids that are paying the price for it.鈥 

As of Tuesday, the Gogebic-Ontonagon program was the only confirmed closure in Michigan since Nov. 1, , which has so far reported 25 closures nationwide. 

Education advocates warned other programs around the state that have missed grant payments are at imminent risk of running out of money, too. 

Statewide, Michigan has 48 Head Start and Early Head Start programs that serve nearly 30,000 children, bringing in $423 million in federal funds annually, said Robin J. Bozek, executive director of the Michigan Head Start Association. 

Nine of those programs serving 2,944 children, many of them in the Upper Peninsula and northern lower Michigan, saw their funding grants expire Nov. 1, Bozek said. 

Though some of those programs have been able to piece together enough funds from local schools or community groups to temporarily keep them afloat, the lack of new federal funding means money is tight and the future is uncertain, Bozek said. 

鈥淎nytime there’s a pause or a stop鈥t totally disrupts the system for this type of grant,鈥 she said. 

For the Gogebic-Ontonagon Community Action Agency, there was no money to fall back on. When the grant didn鈥檛 come through, the Head Start program had to wind down. 

鈥淲e started looking at this in mid-October, thinking, we鈥檇 better prepare just in case this was going to happen,鈥 Pertile said. 鈥淎s it got closer to the deadline, we knew that it was highly unlikely we would get our grant.鈥

In the short term, program employees are able to collect unemployment, and a local daycare offered to open up temporary slots to help care for kids who鈥檇 previously been attending the Head Start program, Pertile said. 

The agency is also looking at the possibility of setting up a mobile food drive for local families in need, and Pertile is planning to provide weekly updates to staff and parents as they learn more.

Even if the shutdown ends tomorrow, it will still take some time to get operations back up and running, she added, noting that many Head Start participants in their rural community don鈥檛 have other options readily available for early learning programs, health checks and meals. 

鈥淭he longer this goes on, the more concerned we get,鈥 Pertile said. 鈥淏ecause we’re such a rural program, there are limited resources鈥hey might be able to do it for a couple weeks, but then they might have to look for something more permanent.鈥

Looking ahead to next month, grants for another four Michigan Head Start programs will come up for renewal Dec. 1, Bozek said, meaning the financial pressures felt by Gogebic-Ontonagon and eight other programs could soon extend to others across Michigan. 

Losing Head Start options would be 鈥渁 huge hardship鈥 to families whose parents need a safe place for their young children while at work, Bozek said. 

But beyond that, she said, it would put early educators out of work and cut needy families off from a connector for additional resources, including food assistance, health care, and even warm coats for kids as the cold weather creeps in. 

鈥淲hen a Head Start program closes, it impacts the entire community,鈥 Bozek said.

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