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Funding Map for New Orleans’ Afterschool Programs. The Afterschool Partnership August 20, 2008. Issue Statement. Less than 25% of school-age children in New Orleans currently have access to afterschool programs
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Funding Map for New Orleans’ Afterschool Programs The Afterschool Partnership August 20, 2008
Issue Statement • Less than 25% of school-age children in New Orleans currently have access to afterschool programs • Afterschool programming is most limited in the areas that had the most extreme flooding • The areas of the city with the highest crime rates have the most limited afterschool programming
Issue Statement (cont.) • The overwhelming majority of afterschool programs targets elementary and middle school students, with little for high school students • State afterschool funders have made it difficult for programs to rely on stable funding
Afterschool Partnership’s Role • Local afterschool intermediary • Publishes local funding guide for programs based on funding research • Sponsors sustainability workshops • Regularly surveys programs to understand access funding issues
Purpose of Report • Research federal discretionary programs • Research federal block grants • Research state own-source funds • Research city own-source funds • Research largest local private funders
Framing the Analysis Definition of Afterschool funding sources: Sources that can be used to provide educational, enrichment, recreational or supportive services to children ages 5-18 during non-school hours.
Post- Katrina Limitations • State plans are very general, and only include broad target areas for federal block grant allocations versus specific awardees and amounts. • Local funders do not all keep track of awards by specific subject areas/target population. One funder included early childhood grants in total, while another had everything generally categorized as “education.”
Federal Budget Trends • Federal spending on children has declined in recent decades, from 20% of the federal domestic spending in 1960 to 15% of the federal domestic spending 2006. • Almost all children’s programs are discretionary, and will continue to lose out to entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security. • Children’s programs primarily target low-income families, so benefits disappear when income increases.
[1]Id. Overview of Largest Federal Programs Funding Afterschool
21st Century Community Learning Centers Louisiana Allocations FY2004 $21,573,000.62 FY2005 $20,995,000.07 FY2006 $20,853,000.67 FY2007 $20,942,000.36 FY2008 $20,190,000.16 *Estimates show as much as $20,000,000 was not drawn down in 2005 and smaller amounts in subsequent years by Louisiana.
Monthly School-Age Rate Provider Compensation Comparison State Standardized Monthly School-Age Rate Louisiana $165 Arizona $300 Florida $360 Georgia $320 Indiana $616 Mississippi $180 North Carolina $446 Tennessee $240
State Investments in Afterschool • TANF - $9.5 million a year/renewed each year so no consistent guarantee of funding • Community Based Tutorial Program - $1.3 million/no new applicants unless current contractor withdraws and only $15,500 a year • Section 8(g) - $5.1 million/year/none for afterschool
Afterschool Programs Receiving Portion of CDBG ($15.1 million)
Trends in Afterschool • National – NCLB reauthorization and federal domestic funding trends • State – State financial investments and supportive legislative examples • Local – Youth Opportunities Task Force
Recommendations - Federal • Build capacity with providers to make sure grants that are submitted are more competitive, which means working with them on program design • Pursue more discretionary grants
Recommendations - State • Effectively lobby for the state to allocate more TANF funding for Afterschool for All, and to make specific allocations of Section 8(g) funding to afterschool and summer camps • Work with DSS on reasonable school-age licensing regulations and Quality Rating System requirements so that school age providers are more likely to go through licensing • Consider pursuing a dedicated revenue stream like unclaimed lottery money or duplicate birth certificates (like Children’s Trust), etc. • Consider legislative action to establish a statewide afterschool network • Develop and re-apply for a Mott Foundation statewide afterschool network grant, to build statewide advocacy and support within the field
Recommendations - Local • Establish the Youth Opportunities Task Force to develop a plan for afterschool and youth development activities and funding in New Orleans • Work with the City toward obtaining a local dedicated revenue stream • Support NORD’s efforts to seek more city funding for the recreation budget • Work with local private foundations and corporations to nurture a stronger investment in afterschool and summer