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New Mexico officials outlined plans Friday to expand child care access and improve program quality as the state prepares to implement universal child care beginning Nov. 1.

The Early Childhood Education and Care Advisory Council discussed several initiatives aimed at strengthening the state’s child care system during its meeting in Silver City, including a newly launched low-interest revolving loan fund to help providers expand facilities.

“Universal child care is about making good on New Mexico’s commitment to families and educators,” said Kendal Chavez, deputy secretary of the Early Childhood Education and Care Department.

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has prioritized transforming early childhood education in New Mexico. Chavez said the universal child care expansion represents the completion of a promise that will benefit multiple generations.

The revolving loan fund will provide low-interest financing to help child care providers expand, renovate or build facilities to meet increasing demand for services.

Council members also received updates on the redesign of FOCUS, New Mexico’s quality rating and improvement system for early childhood programs. Department leadership noted the FOCUS redesign operates on an independent timeline from the universal child care rollout.

“New Mexico is making significant investments in building a robust future for early childhood education,” said Dr. Cindy Martinez, an advisory council member and director of the New Mexico Center of Excellence for Early Childhood Education.

Martinez said the initiatives, including increased reimbursement rates and facility improvements, aim to create an environment where providers can flourish and educators can develop professionally.

The council’s agenda also included regional highlights from community partnerships, updates on data collection efforts and a report on home visiting program standards.

The advisory council will meet next on Dec. 10 from 1 to 4 p.m. in Albuquerque.

The council includes state and local education leaders, early childhood professionals, service providers, tribal representatives and parent representatives. It engages stakeholders to help create a comprehensive prenatal-to-5 system for New Mexico children and families.

The advisory council fulfills a federal requirement for states to establish a state early childhood council.

The post New Mexico prepares to launch universal child care program in November appeared first on Sandoval Signpost.


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