UPDATED 9/18/14 1 p.m.

Nora Yolles-Young enrolled her 5-year-old son Sam in a private school near Kaimuki this year that charges about $10,000 annually for tuition.

Yolles-Young, 42, and her husband receive financial aid that covers close to half the cost and are borrowing some money from a relative.

Still, the couple can hardly afford the remaining tuition expenses and other school-related fees with their $65,000 income, which has to support a family of four. And now the family is even more strapped for cash: Yolles-Young鈥檚 husband, Scott Young, recently got laid off from his job at the University of Hawaii.

Kindergarten age notice on office door at Ala Wai Elementary School on August 21, 2014

Kindergarten age notice on an office door at Ala Wai Elementary School on Aug. 21.

PF Bentley/Civil Beat

鈥淲e don鈥檛 have a lot of extra nest-egg money to play with,鈥 Yolles-Young said. 鈥淎nd that is just the way it is 鈥 we鈥檙e no different than a lot of people dealing with this funky economy.鈥

But when it comes to Sam鈥檚 schooling, the family doesn鈥檛 have much choice but to pony up.

Sam was born in the middle of August in 2009, meaning he missed the new kindergarten age cutoff by only a few weeks. A that the Legislature passed in 2012 moving the cutoff from Dec. 31 to July 31 went into effect this year, barring Sam and another 5,800 or so kids from entering public-school kindergarten.

From now on, families with 鈥渓ate-born鈥 children such as Sam have to resort to other options. And contrary to what advocates of the new kindergarten cutoff age pledged when justifying the change, those options are few.

For families of means, there鈥檚 costly private education or child care. The vast majority of Hawaii鈥檚 preschools are private, and preschool for a 4-year-old in Hawaii costs more than $8,000 a year on average.

For the poorest or at-risk families, there are options such as the federal Head Start program. But that program, which last year enrolled nearly 750 late-born children, has faced hefty budget cuts because of sequestration.

Alternatives are limited for the remaining families, particularly those like the Youngs that fall somewhere in between rich and poor.

鈥淓ven though we鈥檙e considered a middle-class family, that鈥檚 still doesn鈥檛 mean you鈥檙e making a living wage here,鈥 Yolles-Young said, adding that her family wouldn鈥檛 qualify for low-income assistance.

‘No Contingency Plan’

Even efforts to ramp up early education programs earmarked for lower-income families 鈥 and offset the kindergarten fallout 鈥 have foundered.

UPDATED: The Legislature set aside $6 million last year to expand the existing Department of Human Services鈥 Preschool Open Doors subsidy program for low- and moderate-income聽residents 鈥斅燽ut that money is only enough to support tuition for 1,087 children,聽including 524 of the late-born kids, whose average family income is $32,800. (Last year, the program served 325 children with an average family income of聽$27,000, according to DHS data.)

was at best a modest victory for early learning advocates, considering Gov. Neil Abercrombie, whose cabinet spearheaded the state鈥檚 early learning initiative, had requested roughly $30 million to create a 鈥渟chool readiness鈥 program to accommodate the gap children.

Meanwhile, the 2013 Legislature shelved that would have established a comprehensive early learning network incorporating public and private preschool providers 鈥 a model some say is key to ensuring universal preschool. The Legislature killed the measure that Hawaii鈥檚 constitution precludes the state from developing a public-private school system and decided instead to have voters weigh in on the issue.

础听 will appear on this year鈥檚 ballot as Question No. 4. And as Civil Beat reported聽Monday, that amendment鈥檚 passage is far from guaranteed.

And, after a procedural mixup derailed a number of key bills this year, the only early education initiative that the 2014 Legislature funded was a one-year pilot program that establishes pre-kindergarten classrooms on public school campuses statewide.

Kindergarten class at Ala Wai Elementary School on August 21, 2014

The lucky ones: A kindergarten class at Ala Wai Elementary School on Aug. 21.

PF Bentley/Civil Beat


That program got 鈥 just a fraction of the requested $5.2 million 鈥 which is only enough to cover free preschool seats at 18 public schools for 301 late-born children who are below 200 percent of the poverty line, according to DOE data. Abercrombie intended to serve 640 children at 30 public schools.

But even with Head Start, Preschool Open Doors and the DOE pre-K program, among other piecemeal offerings, there are likely thousands of families having to make sacrifices and tough decisions.

鈥淭here was no contingency plan for the group most affected,鈥 said Wayne Watkins, a preschool educator who oversees the Children鈥檚 Center at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

A Well-Intentioned Policy?

Supporters of the new kindergarten policy touted it as a strategy that was designed to improve the quality of and access to early education opportunities in the state.

Extensive research points to the value of early learning opportunities in reducing achievement gaps and ensuring children are successful in school and later in life. In Hawaii, roughly four out of every 10 children enter kindergarten having never attended preschool.

The 2012 law made a number of key changes: namely, it repealed the state鈥檚 junior kindergarten program and established the Executive Office on Early Learning, charging that agency with developing a replacement program.

The junior kindergarten program was children born in the second half of the school year with instruction customized to the learning needs of slightly younger kids. But the program, according to Education Committee Chairwoman Sen. Jill Tokuda and other early learning advocates, fell flat. Oftentimes late-born children were simply placed in regular kindergarten classrooms, for example.

“We鈥檝e taken away something from children and parents without putting something we hope to be better in place.鈥 鈥斅燚eborah Zysman, Good Beginnings Alliance

The idea was to repeal the program and replace it with something more effective: a comprehensive early learning system that would ensure quality and universal access to preschool opportunities.

The change would help galvanize support for the preschool initiative, supporters said.

鈥淭he sunsetting of junior kindergarten was really the reason why we had to have this plan in place,鈥 Tokuda told Civil Beat in January 2013. 鈥淚t was that catalyst for change 鈥 that was the wall that was going to prevent us from kicking the can down the road any further.鈥

But critics, including educators who agreed that junior kindergarten wasn鈥檛 doing its job, say the change is having unintended consequences.

Even supporters of the new policy acknowledge its flaws.

鈥淥ur position has always been that we鈥檙e in support of the junior-kindergarten age change while investing in developmentally appropriate early learning for those 4-year-olds,鈥 said Deborah Zysman, executive director of the children鈥檚 advocacy group Good Beginnings Alliance. 鈥淏ut we鈥檝e taken away something from children and parents without putting something we hope to be better in place.鈥

Good Beginnings Alliance supported the kindergarten change that聽those gap children would be served.

So did the Hee Coalition, another advocacy group, which : 鈥渨e prefer that Junior Kindergarten (JK) not be terminated without a guarantee in law that all 鈥榣ate-born鈥 impacted students will have a state-funded early learning program as a replacement to meet their educational needs.鈥

But聽Zysman said the kindergarten change was 鈥渟till the right thing to do鈥 and cited the proposed public-private preschool system 鈥 and the constitutional amendment needed to enable it 鈥 as the best strategy to fill the gap.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to be realists about it with the model we鈥檙e proposing,鈥 Zysman said. 鈥淲e can develop and build where it makes sense, and where there is infrastructure, (we can) build on that and can start serving our children more quickly and more cheaply.鈥

鈥淚f we had to build it all within the DOE … we鈥檒l miss a whole other generation.鈥

Ripple Effects

The policy affects more than just the children and their families.

Just 10,860 children enrolled in kindergarten at Hawaii public schools this year (and, thanks to , kindergarten is now mandatory). Last year, the number of kindergartners in public schools was 16,676.

The reduced enrollment numbers means that dozens of kindergarten teachers have been reassigned, while a number have resigned or retired, according to DOE data.

The change affected 95 teachers, according to the DOE.

Meanwhile, preschool providers have had to overhaul their programming and rejigger their enrollment policies to accommodate kids who would otherwise be in kindergarten 鈥 children with learning needs not typically supported in a preschool setting.

Zysman, whose own son is in this year鈥檚 late-born limbo, said she鈥檚 heard that early learning providers have been flooded with applications because of the extra children needing preschool.

Kindergarten student going over days of the week at Ala Wai Elementary School on August 21, 2014

A kindergarten student going over days of the week at Ala Wai Elementary School on August 21.

PF Bentley/Civil Beat

Watkins said the UH preschool, which primarily serves student parents and charges tuition based on a sliding scale, has had to deny enrollment to those with younger children.

The center has also had to expand its curriculum to accommodate and 鈥渃hallenge鈥 the 35 or so children who would鈥檝e otherwise enrolled in kindergarten. The preschool serves 145 children.

This year there are a lot fewer kindergarten students. Next year there will be a lot fewer first-graders 鈥 probably meaning more shifting around of teachers.

Watkins questioned whether the DOE will be able to reconcile the learning needs of children who鈥檝e had no prior education and children like those at the Children鈥檚 Center who鈥檝e essentially been doing kindergarten work for an extra year.

鈥淎ll (the change) did was kick the can down the road a bit,鈥 Watkins said. 鈥淗ow they鈥檙e planning to address that I鈥檓 not real confident.鈥

And it鈥檚 only the beginning. These shifts will continue to reshape the state鈥檚 public education system as the new kindergarten cohorts work their way through the pipeline, Watkins said. This year there are a lot fewer kindergarten students. Next year there will be a lot fewer first-graders 鈥 probably meaning more shifting around of teachers.

Yolles-Young echoed Watkins’ concerns. The kindergarten change, she said, is more than just an inconvenient, costly expense 鈥 it鈥檚 a setback.

Sam, who turned 5 last month, has been attending early learning programs for much of his life. In fact, when it was time for her to contemplate where to send her son during the gap year, Yolles-Young said she was advised by a teacher not to keep him at the preschool he had been attending.

鈥淭he toddlers and babies go all the way up through preschool, and now these preschools are being asked to take care of kids who are ready for an academic setting,鈥 Yolles-Young said.

鈥淜ids like him who are ready for kindergarten end up causing trouble,鈥 she continued. 鈥淚t puts an unnecessary stress on teachers who are already underpaid as it is. Not only are they having to potty train, but they鈥檙e also having to entertain poor kindergartners.鈥

As it happens, the days of paying for Sam鈥檚 education will soon come to an end. Realizing they鈥檇 be unable to make ends meet here, the Youngs recently decided that they鈥檙e moving to Texas, where job prospects are brighter and school for Sam is free.

Sam鈥檚 schooling is one of many expenses the Youngs simply can鈥檛 afford anymore.

In Texas, children 鈥 a month or so later than Hawaii鈥檚 new cutoff date. Yolles-Young says she鈥檒l be enrolling Sam in public-school kindergarten as soon as they arrive.

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