Plain English Breakdown
While the resolution cites specific statistics (e.g., poverty rates, unsupervised student numbers), it does not mandate how or when funding will be distributed.
Encouraging Investment in Middle School Youth Programs
This resolution asks Delaware lawmakers to invest money in after-school and summer programs for students who have aged out of traditional childcare but are not yet ready to work.
What This Bill Does
- States that the General Assembly should commit to investing in services for youth between aging out of childcare and entering the workforce.
- Notes that current childcare subsidies, known as Purchase of Care, end when a child turns 13 years old.
- Reports statistics showing many students lack supervision after school hours end.
- Cites studies linking afterschool programs to better attendance, graduation rates, test scores, and fewer behavior problems.
Who It Names or Affects
- Students in Delaware who are between the age of traditional childcare eligibility (13) and workforce entry.
- Parents whose children need safe places during unsupervised afternoon hours.
- The General Assembly, which is asked to consider new funding priorities.
Terms To Know
- Concurrent Resolution
- A formal statement passed by both the House and Senate that expresses an opinion or goal but does not create a law with legal force.
- Purchase of Care
- Subsidies for childcare services under the Childcare Development Block Grant that currently end when a child reaches their 13th birthday.
Limits and Unknowns
- This resolution does not create new laws or automatically provide specific funding amounts.
- The text states no further action is required by the General Assembly beyond passing this statement.
- It relies on future decisions to actually allocate money for these programs.