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Child care, preschool slots for CT children are dropping, report says
Proposed 5-year overhaul to CT child care system would cost $2B
Plan to overhaul child care in CT — Too ambitious, or not enough?
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - January
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - December
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - November
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - October
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - September
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - August
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - June
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - May
CT Early Childhood Funder Collaborative Meeting - March
Supporting and Sustaining Black Leadership in Education - CT Early Childhood Funders Collaborative
Federal Early Childhood Education Funding: Philanthropy’s Role in Seizing the Opportunity
Survey: Pandemic Magnifies Employee Childcare Needs
State Early Childhood Office Launches CTCARES For Family Child Care
HARTFORD— The Connecticut Office of Early Childhood has announced that it has launched “CTCARES for Family Child Care” to provide support to licensed family child care providers during the COVID-19 public health emergency and beyond. The initiative is made possible with approximately $830,000 in support from nonprofit organizations, including the Connecticut Early Childhood Funder Collaborative, 4-CT, and other philanthropic groups — and financial support continues to grow.
Early Childhood Funder Collaborative
Cora's Kids Help Danbury Residents Head Back to Work
Child Care and Early Education Providers Are in Crisis. How Are Funders Responding?
NEW YORK, NY -- There is near-universal consensus that early-childhood education programs can break cycles of poverty and lead to lasting upward mobility. But funders say they have always been fragile, and have only become more so due to COVID-19. Early care and education do not receive much public investment compared to K-12 public education. The result is a patchworked system—if you can call it a system—kept afloat by various sources of revenue. Most early care and education providers teetered at the financial edge, with a month or two of reserves on hand even before the crisis. Weeks of closure have likely led to permanent closures for thousands of child care centers.