Joint Finance Committee to Discuss YoungStar: URGENT Action Needed

Wisconsin’s Joint Finance Committee has set the date to discuss and decide the fate of the proposed Quality Rating and Improvement System for child care providers, YoungStar. This meeting is NOT a public hearing– the public can attend to listen only. The meeting is set for: Wednesday, June 23 at 10 am.

The Department of Children and Families continues to respond to child care provider concerns with updates and improvements to the system. YoungStar is now stronger because of YOUR feedback- and it will continue to evolve in response to ideas from the field. Visit our website for more information, resources, and webinars on the program.

We need your help! Please contact your state Representative, Senator, and the two Joint Finance Co-Chairs- Senator Mark Miller and Representative Mark PocanTODAY.

Quality child care matters. Help us send a message by telling legislators:
• to support YoungStar, the Quality Rating and Improvement System (QRIS) for child care, and
• to urge Joint Finance Committee members to vote for Alternative 1 (full funding and a phase-in approach) from the Legislative Fiscal Bureau’s May 24, 2010 paper on the section 13.10 request by the Department of Children and Families to fund their YoungStar plan.

Find out who your representatives are, and how to contact them, by clicking here and entering your mailing address. You can also call the Legislative hotline toll free at 1-800-362-9472.

Please join us for a final push in support of YoungStar and quality care for kids! The quality of care children receive has a huge and proven impact on their development and school-readiness. YOU can take a stand for quality by contacting your legislators and members of the Joint Finance Committee.

“YoungStar,” a Nobel-Laureate Economist, and YOU

We all benefit from YoungStar – Wisconsin’s proposed child care quality rating and improvement system. On June 23rd the funding for this critically needed program will be determined by the Joint Finance Committee. Fully funding YoungStar is an essential and strategic investment Wisconsin must make and here’s why:

Quality Child Care is one of the best possible investments of public and private funds. Studies reveal that children who experience quality early care are less likely to need remedial education, less likely to abuse alcohol and drugs, and less likely to be involved in the criminal justice system than their peers in lower quality care. They are also more prepared for kindergarten, more likely to graduate from high school and more likely to have higher paying jobs. At-risk children in particular are shown to have the most to gain or lose from the quality of care they receive.

Dr. James Heckman, an economist and Nobel Prize winner from the University of Chicago has repeatedly demonstrated the economic benefits of investing in early care and education. “Investing in quality early learning programs is the most efficient way to affect school and life success and to reduce social expenditures later,” he says. Dr. Heckman’s work with the Partnership for America’s Economic Success cites a return of up to $17 for every dollar spent on high quality care.

Wisconsin’s children deserve high quality child care. Today, around 70% of Wisconsin’s children age birth to 5 receive care outside the home. In the past decade, an explosion of research on brain development has identified practices that help children set a strong foundation that lasts into adulthood. Sound nutrition, safe environments, nurturing and skilled caregivers and stimulating activities that spur a child’s social, emotional and mental growth are part of high quality child care. Fostering and rewarding these best practices are key components of YoungStar.

YoungStar resolves a major problem in the Wisconsin Shares child care system – a lack of measuring performance and quality. How many businesses would invest close to $400M in a system with no plan in place for measuring performance and quality? With YoungStar, child care programs throughout Wisconsin, especially those that participate in the “Wisconsin Shares” program will benefit from assessment and improvement practices. Wisconsin’s workforce of 31,000 child care providers will be prompted by YoungStar to continuously improve their quality of care and be rewarded for it. YoungStar sets a five-star rating system for child care providers and rates them on staff education, learning environment, business practices and the health and well being of children. Through this rating system the state will address several key issues in Wisconsin’s child care system. It will create incentives for providers to improve services, particularly for low-income children; offer child care providers of low-income children higher payments for higher quality; and build on existing programs and services that already help improve quality.

YoungStar will give parents comprehensive data on child care quality. YoungStar will provide information on one of the most important decision parents make – where to go for child care. Think of it as a “Consumer Report” for Wisconsin child care.

YoungStar and similar quality rating systems have been field-tested and piloted in Wisconsin and in 20 other states. Nationwide, 20 states have implemented child care quality rating and improvement systems similar to YoungStar. In Wisconsin two recent pilot projects have been implemented: “Grow in Quality” (2005-07) and “Together Quality Grows” (2009).

The benefits of assessing and improving the quality of child care in Wisconsin are far reaching and affect us all. Business depends on quality child care; parents depend on quality child care; and child care providers across the state have been ready for a quality rating and improvement system for over 6 years. On June 23rd we urge all members of our state’s Joint Finance Committee to do what is wise and good for all of Wisconsin – approve full funding for and implementation of YoungStar.

WECA discusses YoungStar on “For the Record”

Wisconsin Early Childhood Association’s executive director Ruth Schmidt joined Department of Children and Families secretary Reggie Bicha on For the Record this weekend. They discussed early education and the proposed child care quality rating and improvement system, YoungStar. Watch the full interview by clicking on the link below.

For The Record: Early Childhood Education.

The interview comes at an important time as the future of YoungStar is currently being discussed in the legislature. The Joint Finance Committee- the group responsible for deciding whether or not the system will be funded- will hold a meeting on YoungStar on Wednesday June 23 at 10am.

Did you miss our YoungStar informational webinar series? Do you want to watch it again?

Thank you to the approximately 500 viewers who participated in our YoungStar webinar series. If you missed any of the three events, or if you want to watch them again, we have posted links to each archived webinar on our website for you to view at your convenience! View one or more of these one-hour events to learn more about each of the four sections within YoungStar.

If you missed it live, one hour of continuing education credit will be accepted by the Registry for viewing each of these archived events. More information is posted on our website.

During the series we presented lots of great resources for providers in the field. We now have all of these resources listed on our YoungStar Resource Page. We hope these resources, and the webinars themselves, are informative and helpful.

Watch and Learn with our YoungStar Informational Webinars!

Do you have questions about how YoungStar could affect your program? Do you want to learn more about how program ratings occur and how programs can advance their own quality? We cordially invite you to join us for a FREE informational webinar series on YoungStar, the proposed quality rating and improvement system for child care providers in Wisconsin. Experts in the field, family and group child care providers, and representatives from the Department of Children and Families will be on hand to discuss the system. View one or more of these one-hour events to learn more about each of the four sections within YoungStar. There will be time to address questions from viewers during each event.

We will be presenting the following webinar events:
Monday May 17, 1-2pm: Overview and Learning Environment & Curriculum section of YoungStar
Wednesday May 19, 1-2pm: Health & Wellness and Professional Practices sections of YoungStar
Wednesday May 26, 1-2pm: Staff Qualifications section of YoungStar

Sessions are free of charge but registration is required. Simply click here to register for one or more sessions. Once registered, a link will be sent to you for use on the day of the session.

*Note: WECA will be offering one-hour of continuing education credit through The Registry for participation in each these events.

DCF Responds to Questions on YoungStar

Since the January introduction of YoungStar-Wisconsin’s proposed quality rating and improvement system for child care- questions have been raised from child care providers across the state. Providers want to know more of the details within the program and want to know how it will affect their own programs. The Department of Children and Families (DCF) has been collecting these YoungStar related questions and has recently published a “frequently asked questions” section on their website. Examples of questions and answers on the website include:

Q: Will programs charge parents more if they are rated at a one or two star level?
A: No. Star ratings will not affect co-payments. Child care programs are owner operated, and programs set their own prices. The star rating will be an important marketing factor for child care programs, and parents are encouraged to choose programs that demonstrate quality practices and have earned points within the quality indicator areas identified.

Q: What can a program do to prepare for an observation rating?
A: Programs should examine their own quality through the use of a program self-assessment tool to identify the strengths of the child care program and areas that may need improvement. YoungStar quality indicator areas are: teacher/director/provider qualifications, the learning environment, professional practices, and the health and wellness of children. Star ratings, quality improvement plans, technical assistance consultation, and/or resource development will focus on these four key areas. Examples of program self-assessment tools can be found here, here or here.

Q: How is Regulatory Compliance defined?
A: A program will be considered to be in “regulatory compliance” unless there are at least two serious violations in the past 12 months. The Department will work with stakeholders to develop a “severity index” which clearly defines “serious violations.” Examples of serious violations could include: violations that endanger the safety of children, failure to conduct background checks, failure to report abuse or neglect of a child, and grossly exceeding the staff to child ratio.

These are only 3 of many questions addressed. To view the entire page, and see if your burning question(s) was answered, visit the site here. Still have a question? Let us know! We’ll answer it if we can and connect you to the correct contact person if we can’t.

Changes Made to YoungStar: Show your Support for this New Version

Changes to YoungStar
The Wisconsin Department of Children and Families (DCF) has been traveling across the state and meeting with many stakeholders about the proposed Quality Rating and Improvement System for child care providers, YoungStar. In response to several child care provider concerns, they have made many updates and improvements to the system. WMELS, CSEFEL, and Strengthening Families trainings are now OPTIONAL points, CDAs have been added to the staff qualifications sections, and more options are available for programs to meet required points in every section. YoungStar is now stronger because of YOUR feedback- and it will continue to evolve as DCF responds to ideas from the field. Please review this new, updated breakdown of points by clicking here.

Take Action and Support YoungStar
Quality matters! The quality of care children receive has a huge and proven impact on their development and school-readiness. YOU can take a stand for quality by contacting your legislators in support of YoungStar, Wisconsin’s proposed QRIS. This is an opportunity to put the early education profession in its proper light, with the real story of its importance. The field is NOT all about fraud, nor is it about “babysitting” kids for money. Early education professionals are key to effective, high quality programs for Wisconsin’s young children. Please contact your state Representative and Senator TODAY and tell them to support YoungStar, the Quality Rating and Improvement System (QRIS) for child care. Either call the Legislative hotline toll free at 1-800-362-9472 or send your representatives an email message. Find out who your legislators are by clicking here and entering your home address.

Wisconsin Early Childhood Association (WECA) believes YoungStar will: improve the overall quality for children in child care, provide a tool for parents to identify and select quality child care, create incentives to improve services to low-income children, link quality to Wisconsin Shares payments, and provide a mechanism to further prevent fraud in the Wisconsin Shares program. Join us in support of YoungStar and quality care for kids.

Two More YoungStar Events in Milwaukee

The Wisconsin Department of Children and Families (DCF) has been traveling across the state and meeting with many stakeholders about the proposed Quality Rating and Improvement System for child care providers, YoungStar. In response, they have been making updates and improvements to the system.

Two more events will take place in Milwaukee this week. DCF staff and other community partners will discuss the program and hope to receive feedback from childcare providers. If you have questions or comments, please attend one of the following events:
Tuesday, March 23 from 6- 8 pm at Milwaukee Brotherhood of Firefighters Hall, 7717 West Good Hope Road
Wednesday, March 24 from 6- 8 pm at Milwaukee Public Schools Central Services Auditorium, 5225 West Vliet Street

RSVP to either event by emailing: michelle.warren@wisconsin.gov

Milwaukee Child Care Summit Announced

The Unity Caucus and Senator Lena Taylor (D-Milwaukee) recently announced a child care summit in part to address concerns that the child care community has raised in response to changes in background checks, Wisconsin Shares, and quality ratings. According to a press release sent from Senator Taylor’s office:

“The summit will offer advice ranging from how to open a day care center to questions about receiving micro-loans. In addition, information about Wisconsin Act 76, the recent changes to the Wisconsin Shaves Program, will be shared and discussed…The event seeks to teach individuals the inner workings of an audit and what one must do during the procedure. Questions will also be answered about any possible issues or concerns one might have about child care centers and how to use the proposed YoungStar system.”

Experts will be available to answer questions and will include Secretary Reggie Bicha, Joyce Mallory (executive director of the Malaika Early Learning Center), a representative of Jo’s Daycare Academy, and attorney Felicia Miller Watson.

The summit will take place on Saturday February 27th between 9 am and 1 pm at the Greater New Birth Church, 2207 West Center Street. For more information, you can contact Senator Taylor at 608.266.5810.

YoungStar Details Emerge from the State

Recently, the Wisconsin Department of Children and Families (DCF) released details on the proposed Quality Rating and Improvement System for child care providers, YoungStar. In one document DCF describes reasons why a QRIS was created, what the QRIS is proposed to do, and the timeline for implementation. The program is proposed to begin in August 2010 and initial ratings are expected to appear on the DCF website in October 2010. This document also details the recommendation to link Wisconsin Shares reimbursement rates with provider quality. These changes in payment rates-which will increase by 25% for 5 star programs, 10% for 4 star programs, and 5% for 3 star programs-are proposed to be implemented in July of 2011. Read the full summary document here.

In another document, DCF details how programs can earn points, how many points are needed (and what criteria must be met) for each star level, and how family child care programs and child care centers can earn points in different ways. Points are awarded in 4 categories: teacher qualifications/education, learning environment/curriculum, professional practices, and health and wellness. Certain indicators must be met in each of the four categories to reach higher ratings. View the full document here.

Keep visiting our blog and the DCF website as more details about YoungStar are unveiled.