2023 -- S 0492 | |
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LC001598 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2023 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION - RHODE ISLAND EARLY EDUCATOR INVESTMENT ACT | |
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Introduced By: Senators Cano, Murray, and DiMario | |
Date Introduced: March 07, 2023 | |
Referred To: Senate Education | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 16 of the General Laws entitled "EDUCATION" is hereby amended by |
2 | adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 112 |
4 | RHODE ISLAND EARLY EDUCATOR INVESTMENT ACT |
5 | 16-112-1. Short title. |
6 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Rhode Island Early Educator |
7 | Investment Act." |
8 | 16-112-2. Legislative findings and purpose. |
9 | The general assembly hereby finds that: |
10 | (1) Young children's healthy brain development and learning depends on consistent, |
11 | nurturing care and enriching learning opportunities at home and in early care and education settings. |
12 | Starting at birth, day-to-day interactions with family members and early educators shape children’s |
13 | brain architecture upon which all future learning and development is built. |
14 | (2) Many of the early educators and early childhood professionals in Rhode Island earn |
15 | very low wages even when they achieve credentials equivalent to kindergarten through grade |
16 | twelve (K-12) teachers and demonstrate effective practices. Child care, family home visiting, early |
17 | head start, head start, Rhode Island Pre-K, and Early Intervention (Part C of the Individuals with |
18 | Disabilities Education Act) programs across the state report difficulty attracting, developing, and |
19 | retaining effective early childhood professionals. |
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1 | (3) A 2019 statewide survey of early childhood professionals in Rhode Island found that |
2 | over forty percent (40%) of infant/toddler educators worry about having enough food to feed their |
3 | family and fifty percent (50%) worry about having enough money to pay for housing. |
4 | (4) The 2019 statewide survey also found that almost one-third (1/3) of early educators had |
5 | a second job to help make ends meet and almost two-thirds (2/3) reported that they plan to leave |
6 | their early education job if the compensation does not improve. And yet, most report that they enjoy |
7 | working with children and families and many have earned college credits and degrees in child |
8 | development and early education. |
9 | (5) A landmark report issued by the National Academy of Science in 2015 found that |
10 | educators of young children, including infants and toddlers, need the same high level of knowledge |
11 | and competencies as teachers of older children and that educational qualifications and |
12 | compensation of early educators should be equivalent to those of kindergarten through grade twelve |
13 | (K-12) teachers. |
14 | (6) According to 2021 data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median wage for |
15 | a child care teacher in Rhode Island was thirteen dollars and twenty-six cents ($13.26) per hour and |
16 | the median wage for a preschool teacher in Rhode Island was fourteen dollars and eight cents |
17 | ($14.08) per hour in the same range or below the hourly wages in the same range or lower than fast |
18 | food workers, dishwashers, laundry workers, animal caretakers, and retail sales workers. |
19 | (7) By enacting this chapter, the general assembly acknowledges the need to establish goals |
20 | and develop strategies to improve the compensation of early educators in order that programs can |
21 | attract, develop, and retain effective staff to care for and educate young children and provide |
22 | family-focused services. |
23 | 16-112-3. Establishment of wage benchmarks. |
24 | (a) The children’s cabinet established in § 42-72.5-1 shall work in collaboration with the |
25 | department of human services, the department of health, the executive office of health and human |
26 | services, and the department of education to establish goals to improve compensation, including |
27 | cross-departmental wage benchmarks for early educators linked to education levels above high |
28 | school and demonstrated competence working with children and families. |
29 | (b) The compensation benchmarks for early educators shall be developed to apply to |
30 | educators working in child care centers, family child care homes, Rhode Island Pre-K classrooms, |
31 | Early Head Start and Head Start Programs, family home visiting programs, and Early Intervention |
32 | (Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) programs. The cross-departmental |
33 | compensation benchmarks for early educators shall promote parity with compensation of |
34 | kindergarten through grade twelve (K-12) public school teachers for individuals with similar |
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1 | credentials. |
2 | (c) In developing this cross-departmental compensation benchmarks for early educators, |
3 | the children’s cabinet may consider the findings and recommendations provided in the 2019 |
4 | Moving the Needle on Compensation Task Force's report "Improving the Compensation and |
5 | Retention of Effective Infant/Toddler Educators in Rhode Island" and Rhode Island occupational |
6 | wage data available through the U.S. Department of Labor and Rhode Island department of labor |
7 | and training. |
8 | 16-112-4. Developing strategies to increase compensation of early educators. |
9 | Once the compensation benchmarks for early educators have been established, the |
10 | children’s cabinet shall design strategies and estimate the cost to close the gap between current |
11 | wages and the cross-departmental compensation benchmarks for early educators, including parity |
12 | with public school teaching staff or individuals with similar credentials. In developing the plan, the |
13 | following components shall be considered: |
14 | (1) Continuation and expansion of the existing statewide, comprehensive, research-based |
15 | early childhood workforce development scholarship program established under § 16-87-4 to |
16 | include stronger and ongoing support for compensation, such as implementation of wage |
17 | supplements or regular stipends for early educators to lift annual income to meet or exceed the |
18 | compensation benchmarks for early educators. |
19 | (2) Proposals to increase rates paid to early childhood programs that are adequate to enable |
20 | programs to pay early educators wages that meet or exceed the levels in the cross-departmental |
21 | compensation benchmarks for early educators. |
22 | (3) Contracts to early childhood programs to expand the availability of high-quality |
23 | services for young children and families with educators in the program paid wages that meet or |
24 | exceed the levels in the cross-departmental compensation benchmarks for early educators. |
25 | (4) Registered apprenticeships for early educators that support completion of college |
26 | coursework and attainment of college credentials while providing opportunities to develop high- |
27 | quality practices through regular on-the-job coaching by master early educators. Apprenticeships |
28 | shall be designed and funded to enable successful participants to earn wages that meet or exceed |
29 | the levels in the cross-departmental compensation benchmarks for early educators. |
30 | 16-112-5. Reporting. |
31 | The children’s cabinet shall report back to the governor and general assembly on or before |
32 | December 1, 2023 with the cross-departmental compensation benchmarks for early educators and |
33 | initial cost estimates for strategies and public funding needed to close the wage gaps for early |
34 | educators. |
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1 | SECTION 2. Section 42-72.5-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-72.5 entitled |
2 | "Children's Cabinet" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 42-72.5-2. Policy and goals. |
4 | The children's cabinet shall: |
5 | (1) Meet at least monthly to address all issues, especially those that cross departmental |
6 | lines, and relate to children's needs and services; |
7 | (2) Review, amend, and propose all interagency agreements necessary to provide |
8 | coordinated services to children; |
9 | (3) Produce an annual comprehensive children's budget, to be submitted with other budget |
10 | documents to the general assembly; |
11 | (4) Produce, by December 1, 2015, a comprehensive, five (5) year statewide plan and |
12 | proposed budget for an integrated state child service system. This plan shall be submitted to the |
13 | governor; the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate, and updated |
14 | annually thereafter; |
15 | (5) [Deleted by P.L. 2015, ch. 141, art. 5, § 21]. |
16 | (6) Develop a strategic plan to coordinate and share data to foster interagency |
17 | communication, increase efficiency of service delivery, and simultaneously protect children's |
18 | legitimate expectations of privacy and rights to confidentiality. This shall include data-sharing with |
19 | research partners, pursuant to data-sharing agreements, that maintains data integrity and protects |
20 | the security and confidentiality of these records. Any such data-sharing agreements shall comply |
21 | with all privacy and security requirements of federal and state law and regulation governing the use |
22 | of such data. Any universal student identifier now in use by the state or developed in the future |
23 | shall not involve a student's social security number.; and |
24 | (7) Establish and maintain updated cross-departmental compensation benchmarks for early |
25 | educators working in child care, Rhode Island Pre-K, Head Start, Early Head Start, family home |
26 | visiting, and Early Intervention (Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) |
27 | programs that aligns with compensation of similarly qualified kindergarten through grade twelve |
28 | (K-12) educators. These compensation benchmarks shall be posted on the children's cabinet's |
29 | website and updated annually using available data on wages. |
30 | SECTION 3. Title 40 of the General Laws entitled "HUMAN SERVICES" is hereby |
31 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
32 | CHAPTER 6.7 |
33 | CHILD CARE AND EARLY EDUCATOR REGISTRY |
34 | 40-6.7-1. Child care and early educator registry. |
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1 | On or before December 1, 2023, the department of human services shall implement a child |
2 | care and early educator registry that meets the recommended guidelines of the National Workforce |
3 | Registry Alliance, and includes information about staff who work directly with children in all |
4 | licensed child care centers and family child care homes in the state. The registry shall be designed |
5 | to support communication of important information and opportunities, including training |
6 | opportunities and opportunities to receive a wage supplement, directly to front-line child care and |
7 | early educators. The registry shall also be designed to help the state gather and maintain information |
8 | about the demographics and annual turnover of child care educators by key factors including |
9 | educational qualifications and age category of children they teach. |
10 | 40-6.7-2. Reporting. |
11 | Annually, beginning on or before March 31, 2024, the department of human services shall |
12 | produce an annual report on the status of the child care educator registry and the characteristics of |
13 | the child care workforce, including demographic information, qualifications, and turnover data. |
14 | The report shall be shared with the general assembly, the children’s cabinet, all licensed child care |
15 | centers and family child care homes, individuals participating in the registry, and posted on the |
16 | department’s website for the general public. |
17 | 40-6.7-3. Pilot program. |
18 | (a) On or before December 1, 2023, the department of human services shall design and |
19 | begin implementation of a five million dollars ($5,000,000) pilot program to provide regular wage |
20 | supplements for child care educators. The program shall be designed to narrow or close the gap |
21 | between the actual wages of the child care educators and the compensation benchmarks for early |
22 | educators established by the children’s cabinet. |
23 | (b) The department shall consider the design of the Infant/Toddler Educator Education and |
24 | Retention Awards demonstration program recommended in 2019 by the Moving the Needle on |
25 | Compensation's Task Force and the child care wages model and other wage supplemental models |
26 | implemented by at least fifteen (15) states. |
27 | (c) The pilot program shall include child care educators who work in both licensed child |
28 | care centers and family child care homes and shall be available statewide, with priority given to |
29 | child care educators who work with infants and toddlers and children enrolled in the child care |
30 | assistance program. |
31 | SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC001598 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION - RHODE ISLAND EARLY EDUCATOR INVESTMENT ACT | |
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1 | This act would charge the children's cabinet with establishing and annually updating cross- |
2 | departmental compensation benchmarks for early educators. This act would also charge the |
3 | children's cabinet and state agencies with developing strategies and estimating costs to improve the |
4 | compensation of early childhood educators in order that publicly funded early childhood programs |
5 | can attract and retain a qualified workforce. This act would further direct the department of human |
6 | services to implement a pilot program to provide regular wage supplements to child care educators |
7 | with a focus on attracting and retaining a qualified workforce to provide high-quality infant and |
8 | toddler care. Additionally, this act would direct the department of human services to implement an |
9 | early educator registry that meets national standards and produce annual Early Educator Workforce |
10 | reports with information from the registry about the characteristics of early educators, staffing |
11 | trends, and staff turnover levels statewide. |
12 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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