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State and Federal Legislative and Policy Updates

This overview provides updates on the Governor's Budget Proposal, current year funding in Alameda County, and federal updates affecting early care and education. It also discusses the President's State of the Union address and potential changes to the child care tax credit.

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State and Federal Legislative and Policy Updates

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  1. State and Federal Legislative and Policy Updates Alameda County Early Care and Education Planning Council January 23, 2015

  2. Overview --Updates • Governor’s Budget Proposal • Current Year Funding in Alameda County • Federal Update

  3. Governor’s Budget Proposal • The Governor proposes to spend $113.3 billion from the state’s General Fund in 2015-16, an increase of $1.6 billion (1.4 percent) over the estimated spending level for the current fiscal year (2014-15).

  4. Governor’s Budget Proposal • He proposes to set aside a portion of revenues – $2.4 billion – and put half in the state’s rainy day fund and half to pay down budgetary debt. • He includes $4 billion more for the state’s new TK-12 school finance system ($50.7 billion total). • “Our long-term fiscal health depends on the wise and prudent actions we take today.”

  5. Governor’s Budget: Early Care and Education • No big changes • $21.5 million for 1.58% COLA for General Child Care, State Preschool, Alternative Payment Programs, Planning Councils • $33.5 million: Continues Funds from Current Year Regional Market Rate (RMR) Increase • $37 million: Continues Funding from Current Year for Preschool Expansion

  6. Governor’s Budget: Early Care and Education • Stage 2: Decrease of $11.6 million to reflect caseload drop and increase in cost per case • Stage 3: Increase of $28.6 million to reflect caseload increase and increase in cost per case

  7. Community Care Licensing • $3 million increase • (Ongoing staff costs are around $14 million) • 28.5 positions for backlog of complaints and expand training and technical assistance • Beginning January 2017, DSS will increase inspection frequency to 3 years for all facilities • Beginning January 2018, every two years for all EXCEPT child care • Annually by 2019 for all adult care and residential care facilities for the elderly

  8. Community Care Licensing • Licensing Website has more information about inspections, complaints and violations • Center for Investigative Reporting has scanned inspections reports and related documentation and is available online

  9. Related Issues: Cal Works • Reflects the 5 percent increase in the CalWORKs grant – effective April 2015 – that was part of the 2014-15 budget agreement, but assumes no additional grant increase in 2015-16 • Levels remain lower than before Great Recession

  10. Current Year ECE Funding in Alameda County • Preschool Restoration: 347 Slots (most through Kidango or YMCA of Central Bay Area) • Preschool Expansion: No funding allocated to our County but $4,345,427 applied for. No awards announced yet. • CCTR Restoration(infants and toddlers): 80 slots

  11. Federal • Early Head Start/Child Care Partnership grants announced. All three Alameda County applicants will receive funding (CAPE, YMCA of the Central Bay Area and Alameda Family Services) • In Alameda County, tentative results: • 161 slots • Enhanced slots in Oakland, Berkeley, Hayward and Dublin) • Child Care Block Grant Reauthorization will bring major changes (annual licensing visits, annual eligibility) could cost $5 billion nationally but no funds available

  12. President’s State of the Union

  13. State of the Union • The President’s budget is released on February 2—but here’s what we know about the child care tax credit proposal so far: • Families with children under 5 could claim a maximum credit of $3,000 per child (50 percent of up to $6,000 of child care expenses per child under 5). • The maximum credit would be available to families with incomes up to $120,000. 

  14. State of the Union • The credit would remain non-refundable (families with incomes too low to owe federal income taxes would not benefit from the credit). • The expanded tax credit would replace child care flexible spending accounts, which allows employees whose employers offer such plans to exclude up to $5,000 in child care expenses from their taxable income. • More to come in President’s budget…

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