
7 minute read
UNSURE
provider programs and adjust payments based on those numbers.

“We want to be helpful,” Cooke added. “We don’t want to create a situation where we’re creating a budget shortfall for community partners. We don’t want to create a situation where there has to be a layo of sta .”
However, as the state tried to balance the number of preschool slots available with the number of kids actually being enrolled, it became clear that the scale tipped too far. Data “showed a signi cantly higher number of available seats in the universal preschool system than participating families,” Early Childhood department spokesperson Hope Shuler wrote in an email to e Colorado Sun, noting that there were about two seats open for every child whose family applied.
Bright, who also serves as board president of the Early Childhood Education Association of Colorado, sees the decision to change funding as something of a bait-andswitch after the Early Childhood department simply couldn’t a ord to pay all participating providers for the surplus of preschool slots. “ ey realized they ran out of money based on the promise they made, and now providers are left carrying the load,” said Bright, who typically keeps his business a oat with no more than two weeks of operating cash in the bank at any one time.
Without upfront payment from the state for all kids who enroll in universal preschool at his centers, Bright said he won’t have the funds to pay his sta .
Under the revised funding plan, which Shuler said was communicated to providers by June 27, the state assessed the number of kids enrolled in programs on July 9. Programs will receive funding Aug. 1 based on that count of kids. However, the latest round of matching preschoolers with speci c programs — so far it has facilitated four sets of matching — was completed later in July. at means providers could end up with preschoolers on the rst day of classes who they haven’t been paid to educate. ey won’t receive funding for those students until the next payment from the state, scheduled for Sept. 8.
Each month from August through May, Shuler said, providers will receive a payment determined by the number of students enrolled in their program on the 15th of the previous month. e sum will be adjusted each month so that the amount given to providers accounts for any enrollment swings and re ects the number of students in their classrooms. at leaves providers like Bright feeling pinched.
“It is very di cult for a provider to hire their sta , prepare their facilities for kids and then not necessarily have all of those seats full but yet have to pay payroll and have to pay the mortgage payment and have to turn the lights on and have to turn the heat and/or AC on,” Bright said. “It’s very di cult for us to do that when you’re now told late in the game that we’re only going to pay you based on enrollments and we’re going to true up your enrollments every month.” e state is rolling out something of a nancial safety net for providers so that they’re guaranteed at least the same amount of funding they received last year under the state’s previous preschool program, called the Colorado Preschool Program. At the end of the school year, the state will compare the amount paid to each provider this year under universal preschool to the amount paid to each provider last year through the Colorado Preschool Program, according to Bright. If a provider earns less in universal preschool than the amount they earned last year through the Colorado Preschool Program, the state will pay them the di erence, he said. e Early Childhood department was not able to clarify details of its plan to ensure providers receive at least as much funding this school year as they did last year. e only nancial path forward, he said, involves keeping kids who enroll last-minute on the sidelines until the state pays providers for them. at means, for instance, that any family who enrolls their 4-year-old from late July through mid-August will have to wait to start universal preschool until September, when Bright receives money from the state for that particular child. e Early Childhood department doesn’t believe any preschools will have to postpone the start times for any kids, with Shuler writing in an email that “payments will be reconciled for the next month and providers will receive pay if children start earlier.”
It’s not yet clear whether providers like Bright who own more than one preschool center — including two that participated in the Colorado Preschool Program and six slated to be part of universal preschool — will be compensated for each licensed facility, which will a ect the amount of funding owed by the state.
Bright added that he can’t wait until the end of the school year for funding that is crucial to his ability to keep running his business.
She said the department is also con dent that the rst payment in August, along with the monthly payments recalculated to compensate providers for any enrollment changes, will “help support providers” and are “much more providerfriendly” than other preschool subsidy programs that have paid based on the number of kids attending their program.
Bright noted that under the Colorado Preschool Program he received funding for the entire school year starting in August with monthly payments through May, contingent on his facilities having all seats funded by the state lled with kids by Nov. 1.
He doesn’t see another option other than a delayed start for kids who enroll late.
“I would drown my company if I were to provide services that I was not paid for,” he said.
Bright and other preschools are also worried about having to shutter centers altogether.
One of the six ABC Child Development Centers Bright owns that is participating in universal preschool has 12 classrooms, only three of which are full with kids whose families have opted into universal preschool. He needs all classrooms full to stay nancially whole at the center, which mostly serves low-income families.
He expects all the classrooms to ll by November, but to keep the school open until then, he needs the upfront funding from the state. If the school stays open with empty classrooms, he’ll have to lay o teachers and will be unable to accept new students until the state pays their tuition.
Meanwhile, Melissa Lelm, director of Early Childhood University in Greeley, has enrolled only 33 students through universal preschool, far short of the 96 licensed spots in her center. e state has matched another 10 students with her facility, but though Lelm has repeatedly called and emailed those families to encourage them to accept their match, she’s been met with silence. At the same time, she has to renew her lease this year with her landlord wanting to raise her rent.
“I don’t know if we’ll be in business at the end of May of 2024,” said Lelm, who has worked in early childhood education for more than 40 years.
Lelm recently laid o four employees who are now collecting unemployment, keeping only one teacher and one teacher assistant on her sta . And as the Early Childhood department pivots to paying providers based on the number of kids enrolled, she anticipates her reserves will dwindle as she tries to cover even the smaller payroll. She’s applying for grants to help ll in the gaps and has so far collected $26,000, including from the state’s Child Care Stabilization and Workforce Sustainability Grants and a $4,000 state Capacity Building Grant that can fund necessities such as furniture and educational and health care materials.
“ at money will go very quickly for payroll and rent,” Lelm said.


She might be forced to lay o her teacher assistant if enrollment continues to stagnate, but Lelm knows that having more than one trained adult in the classroom helps kids and teachers form better bonds.
Lelm wonders if she’ll be up against the same uncertainties around how many students she’ll serve and how many sta she needs each year of universal preschool — if she manages to stay open.
“I just hope it works,” she said. “I don’t know if they thought it through thoroughly enough.” is story is from e Colorado Sun, a journalist-owned news outlet based in Denver and covering the state. For more, and to support e Colorado Sun, visit coloradosun. com. e Colorado Sun is a partner in the Colorado News Conservancy, owner of Colorado Community Media.
Thu 8/10

Destino @ 6pm Marquis Theater, 2009 Larimer St, Denver
Mike Ring *EP Release* @ 8pm / $15
The Black Buzzard at Oskar Blues, 1624 Market St, Denver
Sat 8/12
Kazha @ 7pm HQ, 60 S Broadway, Denver velvetdaydream: Melon Husk w/ Flowerhead, Velvet Daydream & Pill



Joy @ 7:30pm Lost Lake Lounge, 3602 E Colfax Ave, Denver

Fri 8/11
Blood Across the Sky: Swinging Noose Productions presents @ 6:30pm
The Roxy Theater, 2549 Welton St, Denver
Kid Astronaut at Blair Caldwell Library Re-opening @ 10am Denver Public Library: Blair-Caldwell African American Research Library, 2401 Welton St, Denver
Loktavious @ 6pm
The Black Buzzard, 1624 Market St, Den‐ver

The Mssng: Bene�t Concert for Comeback Yoga @ 3pm Elks Lodge, 1455 Newland St, Lakewood Quits @ 7pm Hi-Dive, 7 S Broadway, Denver

Mon 8/14
Colorado Rockies vs. Arizona Diamondbacks @ 6:40pm / $9-$300 Coors Field, 2001 Blake St., Denver Bully @ 7pm / $20 Marquis, 2009 Larimer St, Denver
VIAL at Larimer Lounge @ 7pm Larimer Lounge, 2721 Larimer St, Denver
Relay Relay: Sofar Denver @ 8pm Sofar Denver, Denver

Pie Lombardi @ 8pm Lost Lake Lounge, 3602 E Colfax Ave, Denver
Jaimee Harris @ 8pm Swallow Hill Music Association, 71 E Yale Ave, Denver
Sun 8/13
Substitute Creature @ 4pm Larimer Lounge, 2721 Larimer St, Denver
Magoo @ 6pm Lost Lake Lounge, 3602 E Colfax Ave, Denver
Weyes Blood @ 7:30pm


Red Rocks Amphithe‐atre, 18300 W Alameda Pkwy, Morri‐son
Tue 8/15
Shawn Nelson Music @ 6pm Old Capitol Grill & Smokehouse, 1122 Washington Ave, Golden
Juno Birch @ 8pm Ogden Theatre, 935 E. Colfax Ave., Den‐ver



DJ Rockstar Aaron: Forbidden Bingo Tuesdays - 'Bout Time Pub & Grub @ 8pm Bout Time Pub & Grub, 5225 W 80th Ave, Arvada
Tenia Nelson Trio at DCPA Glasstop @ 5pm Denver Center for the Performing Arts, 1101 13th St, Denver

Dave Abear and Friends - Live Dead Wednesdays At So Many Roads Museum and Brewery @ 6pm So Many Roads Brewery, 918 W 1st Ave, Denver
Seth Beamer @ 8pm Globe Hall, 4483 Logan St, Denver
Wed 8/16 Calendar
All events are subject to change or cancellation. This publication is not responsible for the accuracy of the information contained in this

