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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Picraux
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/31/2007
2/24/2007 HB HM 3/aHFL
SHORT TITLE
Young Children & Families Continuum Group
SB
ANALYST Weber
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Human Services Department (HSD)
Department Of Health (DOH)
Children, Youth and Families (CYFD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HFl Amendment
The amendment makes minor language changes that have no impact on the substance of the
memorial.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Memorial 3 creates the Young Children and Families Continuum Work Group (Work
Group). The Work Group would be appointed equally by the Chair of the Children's Cabinet and
the Chair and Vice Chair of the Legislative Health and Human Services Committee Work Group
and would include persons representing the Early Childhood Action Network (ECAN): child
health; and child development, mental health, early care, education, human services, community
providers, advocates, businesses and faith communities, the media, academia, and child
development research fields, and include family representatives and members representing the
cultural, ethnic, economic and geographic diversity of the state. Membership would include
pg_0002
House Memorial 3/aHFl – Page
2
family representatives with experience in health, mental health, education and social needs of
young children birth to age eight and their families.
The Work Group would set priorities for investment over the next three years to strengthen a
comprehensive statewide early childhood system. The system would address the following
areas: family involvement and family support; physical and mental health; early learning;
child safety; and transition from early childhood to school. The group will be charged to make
recommendations on a continuum of services to better coordinate and link components of the
present comprehensive system. The group would make recommendations to improve families’
access to a continuum of services; improve lives of children; and set a foundation for school and
personal success.
The Work Group would report its recommendations to the interim legislative Health and Human
Services Committee by November 2007. A copy of this memorial is to be transmitted to the
Children’s Cabinet.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Department of Health comments.
Extensive evidence is available to show the association between comprehensive services in early
infancy and preschool years and performance in primary, secondary and post-secondary school.
Economists of the federal reserve bank of Minneapolis have determined through research that
investment in early childhood programs produces an annual rate of return of sixteen percent.
CYFD adds.
The activities required by the memorial could eventually result in positive long-term impact
across multiple agencies and their target client populations through reduced poverty-related
expenses (i.e., crime, healthcare, housing, TANF); reduced employment-related expenses
resulting from lower unemployment, work absence, and higher average wages; reduced health-
related expenses directly related to early detection of developmental conditions; and through
improved educational achievement and family well-being.
HSD notes the similarities of the group proposed with the existing Early Childhood Action new
work.
The work group would include representatives from the Early Childhood Action Network
(ECAN), child health and development, mental health, early care, education and human services
community providers, advocates, businesses and faith communities, the media, academia and
child development research fields. The representatives mentioned above are already represented
in the ECAN and the early childhood issues identified in this memorial are also similar to those
currently being addressed by ECAN, so it is not clear what the difference would be between
these two groups.
MW/nt