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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Nava
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1-31-2006
7-07-06 HB
SHORT TITLE Study Creation of Office of School Readiness
SB SJM 6/aSEC
ANALYST Dearing
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
NFI*
*Please See Narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Education Department (PED)
Department of Health (DOH)
Department of Finance & Administration (DFA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SEC Amendment
Senate Education Committee has amended Senate Joint Memorial 6 such that:
1.
On page 3, line 2, after “board” insert “, private child care associations”.
As amended, the applicability of the provisions of this joint resolution are not substantively
changed.
Synopsis of Senate Joint Memorial
Senate Joint Memorial 6 resolves that the Children’s Cabinet, the Children, Youth & Families
Department, the Department of Health, and the Public Education Department, in collaboration
with the Child Development Board and other appropriate agencies, be requested to examine the
feasibility of creating an office of school readiness that would coordinate the range of publicly
funded programs and services for children from birth through age four currently offered by mul-
tiple agencies; and that the aforementioned four agencies report their findings and recommenda-
pg_0002
Senate Joint Memorial 6/aSEC – Page
2
tions to the legislative education study committee by November 2006, and that copies of this
memorial be transmitted to the directors of these agencies as well as the director of the Legisla-
tive Education Study Committee for appropriate dissemination.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
As a joint memorial enactment of this legislation carries no direct appropriation. Therefore, it is
inferred that those costs directly associated with production of this study, such as staff time, sup-
plies, printing, and possibly travel would come from the budgets of the aforementioned agencies.
In the long run, however, after the study has been completed and if the proposed Office of
School Readiness is formed, significant costs associated with its operation could arise, including
hiring of new FTEs, renting of office space, and administrative overhead. The formation of the
proposed office may necessitate the reassignment of staff and associated administrative and fis-
cal functions as well.
*Therefore, while this memorial does not incur any substantial appropriation at this time, it is
conceivable and probable that it will necessitate funding appropriations in future fiscal periods.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to the Public Education Department, to participate successfully in public school, chil-
dren need to have certain skills and abilities. When children begin school with the necessary
characteristics, they are more likely to succeed both in school and later in life. In most states, the
only measure of “school readiness” for school entry is the child’s age. Many states are exploring
how to create an efficient and coordinated early education and school readiness system.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The Governor’s Schools that Work agenda includes increasing the level of excellence for all stu-
dents, PreK-20.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
There is no known conflict, duplication, companionship, or relationship of other legislation to
this Joint Memorial
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to the Department of Finance & Administration, the Education Commission of the
States (ECS) indicates that the concept of school readiness must be defined within a broader con-
text that includes children, schools and the community. Children’s readiness is generally agreed
to include: physical well-being and motor development; social and emotional development; ap-
proaches to learning; language development; and cognition and general knowledge. School
readiness is based on the concept of “ready schools.” ECS states, “Such schools work toward
continuity and alignment between early care and education programs and elementary schools,
and are committed to the success of all children.” Community readiness is founded upon the
idea that “communities offer services and supports that encourage parents to be their child’s first
teacher and that allow all children access to high-quality early care and education,” including
pg_0003
Senate Joint Memorial 6/aSEC – Page
3
access to nutrition, health care, mental health care and parenting classes.
Currently, two other states (Tennessee and North Carolina) have formed a state-level office spe-
cifically for pre-kindergarten children that coordinate various services for these populations.
Several other states have a pre-kindergarten office located in the Departments of Education or
Health and Human Services, including: Maine, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Vermont, Wisconsin,
Washington DC, Arkansas, Florida and New York. Two states have cabinet level agencies, in-
cluding Georgia and Massachusetts.
Currently, New Mexico splits responsibilities for Pre-K education between two agencies: the
Public Education Department and Children, Youth and Families Department. Various state
agencies hold administrative and fiscal responsibilities for state-supported early care and educa-
tion programs, including Family, Infant, Toddler; child care; child development; special educa-
tion services for developmentally delayed three and four year olds; Even Start; GRADS; and
federally supported programs, such as Head Start and Early Head Start.
Findings from the proposed study may shed light on several key policy issues, among them:
-Whether the formation of an office of school readiness is appropriate, desirable and feasible for
New Mexico;
-Under what agency such an office should be located or if it should stand alone;
-Whether duplication of services exist;
-What the fiscal dimensions of the programs are that serve the state’s population of newborn to
four year old children; and
-How a governance structure as proposed in the Office of School Readiness can best be: repre-
sentative, legitimate, authoritative and sustainable.
ALTERNATIVES
SJM 6 could conceivably be made stronger by expanding the scope of the study beyond a singu-
lar focus on the feasibility of the creation of an office of school readiness to include considera-
tion of, among other things: creation of a department of school readiness, whether it should be a
cabinet agency, and what would be the likely staffing and funding requirements.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
This proposed study of the feasibility of creating an Office of School Readiness that would coor-
dinate the range of publicly funded programs and services for children from birth through age
four currently offered by multiple agencies will not be conducted. Fiscally, a wealth of informa-
tion regarding redundancies in funding and agency staffing, among other resource redundancies,
would not be produced.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
Legislative Finance Committee has expressed concerns as to availability of performance data
with the existing Pre-K program, prior to a state-wide “roll-out” of the Pre-K program. Could
this proposed study facilitate addressing these concerns.
PD/yr