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Texas to add $100 million to child care program

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feeds.texastribune.org – By Jess Huff – 2025-05-29 05:00:00


Texas lawmakers have allocated an additional \$100 million for child care scholarships and granted regional workforce boards more flexibility in funding key providers. Nearly 95,000 Texas children remain on waitlists, while rising costs and facility closures have worsened access. The new funds, included in the state budget, aim to help more families afford quality care and support struggling providers, especially in high-need areas. House Bill 2294 allows workforce boards to reimburse high-quality providers at higher rates, addressing sustainability concerns. Experts emphasize that funding, facility availability, and affordability must all improve to resolve Texas’s child care crisis.

Texas poised to add $100 million to child care scholarship program” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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Texas lawmakers are providing an extra $100 million in child care scholarships and giving regional workforce development boards more freedom to allocate money to key providers.

Nearly 95,000 Texas children are on a waitlist for child care scholarships. Meanwhile, brick and mortar facilities are closing and the cost of child care in Texas is making it difficult for working parents to make ends meet.

“Because of this funding, thousands more parents will be able to go to work while their children thrive in high-quality child care,” said David Feigen, the director of early learning policy for the child care advocacy group Texans Care for Children. ”This is a huge step, and we are grateful and energized to help get these funds to the families who are counting on them.”

Feigen’s group is one of several that have put pressure on Texas lawmakers this session to address critical issues affecting child care centers.

Texas’ decision to use previously unallocated federal dollars to address these issues is a massive step forward, experts say. The funding was added to Senate Bill 1, the budget bill, after the Senate finance committee removed it from the House’s supplemental appropriations bill. Rep. Armando Walle confirmed the move Tuesday in a statement to the Texas Tribune.

“I am proud to announce that, through diligent negotiations and collaboration with stakeholders across the board, we secured $100 million in the state budget for child care scholarships,” Walle said. “Access to quality child care is essential for both economic stability and our children’s future. By exploring every budgetary option and building consensus, we achieved a result that will make a real difference in the lives of Texas families.”

Marilyn Hartsook, the interim director for the Deep East Texas Workforce Development Office, is cautiously optimistic about what the money means for the region. She expects the region’s budget for the child care program will grow by about $14 million.

The workforce region currently receives about $17.8 million for direct care, which translates to $23.73 per child per day. Hartsook’s team aims to reach 2,945 children per day under the current budget. That number would increase substantially with new funding, but it is only one part of the solution to child care.

It is also important to recognize that no one-size solution fits all – regions don’t just need additional funding, but some flexibility in how they work with providers, said Kim Kofron, the senior director of early childhood education for ChildrenAtRisk, a child advocacy group.

House Bill 2294, which was sent to the governor, allows for more flexibility in how local workforce boards spend money. The bill gives the boards the discretion to allocate more funding to providers struggling financially, especially in high-need areas.

“We need scholarships,” Kofron said. “We have 95,000 kids on the waitlist. But we also have to make sure that we have the buildings. We also have to make sure we have the teachers. And we have to make sure that it’s affordable. This bill allows us to hopefully address all three of those things in various ways.”

It costs a lot to keep a childcare facility running, and most operate at around a 1% profit margin, Feigen said.

In 2024, the cost was too much for many facilities, and they closed. Texas lost 75,000 child care seats and more areas found themselves to be child care deserts, according to Kofron.

“These child care providers are trying to run a business, but they can’t charge a lot because parents can’t afford it,” said Mandi Kimball, vice president & chief government affairs officer for ChildrenAtRisk. “Even though they’re quality, they’re not getting reimbursed for their quality, and that is impacting the sustainability of child care. Which is why we’re seeing these deserts.”

Sen. Judith Zaffirini, a Laredo Democrat who sponsored the bill in the Senate, said the bill will help high-quality child care centers that serve families in low-income areas catch up.

Providers often must keep their rates low to remain affordable and current law prevents the workforce development boards from reimbursing them above those rates, even if they earn high ratings in the Texas Rising Star program.

“That’s not fair, and it threatens the sustainability of high-quality care in the communities that need it most,” Zaffirini said.

This bill allows the commission to reimburse those providers at a higher rate.

The senator believes that this bill will create more options for quality child care, which would increase enrollment and have broader implications on Texas’ workforce.

Disclosure: Texans Care for Children has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/05/29/texas-child-care-scholarship-funding/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

The post Texas to add $100 million to child care program appeared first on feeds.texastribune.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This article focuses on increased funding and legislative flexibility to support child care in Texas, highlighting efforts to address affordability and quality concerns primarily through state budget allocations and regulatory changes. It emphasizes the challenges faced by working families and child care providers and includes perspectives from advocacy groups and Democratic lawmakers, which suggests a viewpoint sympathetic to social support programs and government intervention in addressing economic and social issues. The language is generally positive about government action and funding increases, aligning more with Center-Left priorities focused on social welfare and public investment.

News from the South - Texas News Feed

Bystander shot during 2023 police shooting in Austin files lawsuit

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www.kxan.com – Brianna Hollis – 2025-09-09 13:25:00

SUMMARY: In December 2023, Nakole Curry, 24, filed a lawsuit after being struck in the eye by a bullet during a police shooting outside Soho Lounge on Austin’s Sixth Street, resulting in permanent blindness. The shooting occurred when a man attempted to illegally bring a gun into the bar, prompting police to intervene. The suit alleges insufficient de-escalation efforts and names the City of Austin, APD, and Soho Lounge. The officers involved were not charged, and the internal investigation closed in October 2024. Curry seeks a jury trial and damages capped by Texas law. The APD offers victim support through the Crime Victims’ Compensation Fund.

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Israeli military urges full evacuation of Gaza City ahead of expanded military operation

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www.kxan.com – WAFAA SHURAFA, SAMY MAGDY, and MELANIE LIDMAN, Associated Press – 2025-09-09 07:15:00

SUMMARY: The Israeli military urged a full evacuation of Gaza City ahead of an expanded offensive targeting Hamas’ stronghold amid severe famine conditions. Despite warnings, few Palestinians have left due to exhaustion, overcrowded displacement sites, and high evacuation costs. Israel demolished 50 high-rise buildings, claiming they housed Hamas military infrastructure. Emergency responders rescued some survivors but faced equipment shortages. Protests erupted in Gaza against the evacuation, with medical staff refusing to leave. Hostage families in Jerusalem urged a diplomatic resolution. The UN highlighted the humanitarian crisis, noting displaced families lack shelter and basic needs. Meanwhile, violence continues in the West Bank, with recent killings and retaliatory Israeli measures.

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‘Resilience and hope’ in Galveston: 125 years after greatest storm in US history | Texas

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square contributor – (The Center Square – ) 2025-09-09 06:00:00


The Great Storm of 1900 devastated Galveston on September 8, killing over 8,000 people and causing $30 million in damages. Winds reached 100 mph, tides rose 16 feet, and nearly all buildings were destroyed, leaving thousands homeless. The aftermath involved severe challenges, including corpse disposal by burning to prevent epidemics, martial law, and widespread suffering. Yet, survivors, led by local leaders, rebuilt the island with seawalls, enabling it to withstand future hurricanes. On the 125th anniversary, the Bryan Museum unveiled “The Emotional Trinity,” a painting symbolizing hope amid tragedy. The storm remains the deadliest U.S. natural disaster in history.

(The Center Square) – Hope remains 125 years after the Great Storm of 1900 decimated Galveston Island.

On Sept. 8, 1900, a massive hurricane tore through Galveston, creating an estimated $30 million worth of damages at the time.

The last wind speed measured 100 miles an hour before instruments were blown away. The tide reached roughly 16 feet above sea level; the barometric pressure at 7:30 PM “was the lowest ever recorded in the United States to that day,” according to accounts in a Rosenberg Library exhibit in Galveston.

An estimated more than 8,000 people were killed in Galveston and north on the mainland, although total deaths are unknown and believed to be much higher. At least 8,000 were left homeless; nearly all buildings and churches were destroyed. Bridges, train tracks, utilities and telegraph lines were wiped out. Ocean steamers were stranded; boats were destroyed. No fresh water and a limited food supply created a desperate situation for survivors.

Corpses were strewn on land and floating in the Gulf. Dead animals, rotting vegetation and fragments of houses were piled stories deep, stretching across the east end of the island.

“There is hardly a family on the island whose household has not lost a member or more, and in some instances entire families have been washed away or killed. Hundreds who escaped from the waves did so only to become the victims of a worse death, being crushed by falling buildings,” one account describes in “Galveston in Nineteen Hundred,” published in 1900 and edited by Clarence Ousley of the Galveston Tribune.

After extensive looting and price gouging ensued among the living, the mayor declared martial law, enforced by the military and local police. All able-bodied men were required to collect the corpses to bury. The volume was so great there wasn’t enough land, men, horses and carts to bury them. Attempts to bury corpses at sea resulted in them washing back ashore. The only solution left was to burn bodies, which lasted for months. Identification of the dead was impossible, according to multiple accounts.

“Bonfires are burning all over the city. They are the funeral of a thousand festering corpses cast back upon the shore at high tide,” another account from Galveston in Nineteen Hundred reads. “Cremation has become a necessity to prevent an epidemic. The townspeople are paralyzed with fright and suffering, or are making preparations to leave the doomed island.”

After appeals were made by the governor and Clara Barton, founder of the Red Cross, relief money, supplies, volunteers and messages of hope poured in from across the country.

“In the wake of the disaster of 1900, the determined majority of the survivors stayed on Galveston Island and turned their eyes to the future,” the library states. They were led by a group of businessmen resolved to rebuild. Among them was W. L. Moody, Sr., who said, “Galveston will be rebuilt stronger and better than ever before.”

Within a few years, part of the east end of the island was raised and a seawall was built. The island survived a massive hurricane in 1915 and every subsequent hurricane. In 125 years, the island’s population increased roughly 35%; more than 8 million visit a year.

Among the many commemorative events on Sept. 8, was the unveiling of the Bryan Museum’s first grand scale outdoor painting, “The Emotional Trinity: Hope, Fear and Awe,” painted by Vickie McMillan-Hayes. It’s available to view for free.

“In the world’s great tragedies that of Galveston stands remarkable. In no other case in history has a disaster met with such courage and fortitude; in no other case in history were the people of the whole world so responsive to the call for help for the helpless,” the museum states.

Its founder, J.P. Bryan, another instrumental leader in Texas and descendent of Stephen F. Austin’s sister, encouraged the public at the unveiling, “in all things great or small, never give in. … Hope abides abundantly regardless of the tragedy and the magnitude of it that you might face like we faced here in Galveston. God’s amazing grace is available for all of us who seek it, and it abides abundantly in our lives.”



Native Texan and wildlife conservation artist Vickie McMillan-Hayes painted “The Emotional Trinity: Hope, Fear and Awe,” in commemoration of the 125 year anniversary of the Great Storm, which killed more than 8,000 people in Galveston on Sept. 8, 1900. It remains the greatest natural disaster in U.S. history. The painting is permanently displayed at the Bryan Museum in Galveston and is free to the public to view.




The painting depicts a woman holding her baby, with her son clinging to her legs, looking at sunlight with the ruins of Galveston below. The baby represents awe; the boy, fear and comfort. The mother “isn’t looking down at destruction but is gazing at hope,” Hayes said. “She has fixed her eyes upon something beautiful. She is looking to the future, renewal, rebirth. She had a choice to look down at the devastation and distraction or to lift her gaze up … in hope.

“This is a question we can all ask ourselves when faced with difficult circumstances, what are my eyes fixed on? Does it lead me on a path of peace and hope for myself? It is the Lord Jesus Christ who gives me great hope,” she said. “It is fixing my eyes on him and him alone.”

The painting was collaborative, with members of the public brushing strokes. “We all came together and added our stroke of paint to this piece, and we were a community at large coming together, making a statement of resilience and hope faced with tragedy,” she said.

The Storm of 1900 remains the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history.

The post ‘Resilience and hope’ in Galveston: 125 years after greatest storm in US history | Texas appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article primarily reports on the historical event of the Great Storm of 1900 in Galveston, focusing on the facts, human impact, and community response without promoting a particular political ideology. The tone is factual and commemorative, emphasizing resilience and hope in the face of tragedy. While it includes references to faith and community values, these elements are presented as part of personal perspectives rather than a political stance. Overall, the content adheres to neutral reporting by recounting historical events and public reactions without endorsing or criticizing any political viewpoint.

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