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Teaching Profession

Head Start Advocates Use Salary Data to Address Critics

By Linda Jacobson 鈥 December 03, 2003 3 min read
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Advocates for Head Start stepped up their defense of the popular preschool program last week, taking aim at critics who have questioned the salaries paid to some local directors and disputing the fairness of proposed new requirements for Head Start teachers.

Bills now pending in both houses of Congress to reauthorize the federal program for poor 3- and 4-year-olds would impose an 鈥渦nfunded mandate鈥 by requiring more teachers to earn bachelor鈥檚 degrees, while not authorizing enough money for teachers to earn more education or higher salaries, officials of the National Head Start Association said during a telephone press conference.

鈥淧eople who want to dismantle Head Start are deliberately setting the bar as high as possible,鈥 charged Sarah Greene, the executive director of the Alexandria, Va.-based association, which represents Head Start employees and families. 鈥淲e are concerned about being set up to fail.鈥

If Congress approves the higher education requirements, Head Start teachers who earn the four-year degrees will be 鈥渓ured away by elementary schools,鈥 said Marge Stillwell, the executive director of the Illinois Head Start Association and a participant in the Nov. 25 press conference.

鈥淲e are very excited about raising the professional skill level of Head Start teachers that we oversee,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut the hard, cold reality here is that we have to have the resources from Congress to meet the goals that it is setting out for us.鈥

But Steve Barbour, a spokesman for the Administration for Children and Families, the agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that runs Head Start, said that the Bush administration and past administrations 鈥渉ave done all they can to raise salaries,鈥 and that local agencies have discretion to raise salaries.

Defending the Program

During the press conference, NHSA officials also released salary figures showing that the vast majority of Head Start directors don鈥檛 make anywhere near $300,000鈥攖he amount that had been paid to the director of a Head Start agency in Kansas City, Mo., and which prompted leading members of the House of Representatives to ask for an investigation into program salaries. (鈥淗efty Head Start Salaries Prompt Federal Inquiry,鈥 Oct. 22, 2003.)

Instead, Ben Allen, the NHSA鈥檚 director of research and evaluation, said that Head Start鈥檚 2,500 executive directors earn an average of $53,114, and that 99 percent of them earn less than $100,000.

The Senate鈥檚 reauthorization proposal recommends a salary cap, stating that no director of a nonprofit agency receiving a Head Start grant would be allowed to earn more than the $171,900 a year that Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy G. Thompson earns.

Head Start teachers earn an average of about $21,000, less than half what elementary school teachers earn on average, according to the NHSA.

The association collected the salary data to counter the perception that there is widespread financial abuse in the program. In fact, Ms. Greene maintained, there are only 鈥渟ix so-called problem cases.鈥

Mr. Allen added that situations involving 鈥渇iscal management deficiencies鈥 were down, compared with previous years.

Mr. Barbour of the Administration for Children and Families conceded that the NHSA鈥檚 figures on salaries were probably correct.

Still, he said, 鈥渢he point is that Head Start is a program for poor kids. No one begrudges a guy driving a Cadillac, but let鈥檚 be honest about where the money is coming from.鈥

The ACF is still working on compiling the salary and other financial data requested in October by Rep. John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, the chairman of the House Education and Workforce Committee, and Rep. Michael N. Castle, R-Del., who chairs the panel鈥檚 Subcommittee on Education Reform. The investigation has been expanded, and a report is due next month.

During the press conference last week, NHSA officials also said that Head Start directors鈥 salaries are approved by federal officials.

But Mr. Barbour said that point was misleading. Regional offices within the Health and Human Services Department, he said, get a 鈥渢otal budget for salaries, but we鈥檝e never asked them to break it down.鈥

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