Biden administration hikes pay for Head Start teachers to address workforce shortage

The administration’s new rules, published Friday, will require large operators to put their employees on a path to earn what their counterparts in local school districts make by 2031. Large operators also will have to provide healthcare for their employees. Smaller operators — those that serve fewer than 200 families — are not bound by the same requirements, but will be required to show they are making progress in raising pay.
“We can’t expect to find and hire quality teachers who can make this a career if they’re not going to get a decent wage as much as they might love the kids,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said in an interview.
U.S. Rep. Virginia Foxx, a North Carolina Republican who chairs a committee on education and the workforce, said the administration was overfunding the program.
“The effort smells like an attempt to form Head Start educators into a unionized political block. Political patronage should never take precedent over children’s lives,” she said.
The program has generally enjoyed bipartisan support and this year Congress hiked its funding to provide Head Start employees with a cost-of-living increase.
The requirements, while costly, do not come with additional funding, which has led to fears that operators would have to cut slots in order to make ends meet. That is part of the reason the administration altered the original proposal, exempting smaller operators from many of the requirements.
The National Head Start Association, which advocates for programs and their operators, applauded the new rule but said it worries how Head Starts will implement the rules without additional federal money.
But the administration has argued that it cannot allow an antipoverty initiative to pay wages that leave staff in financial precarity. Like much of the early childhood workforce, many Head Start employees are women of color.
“For 60 years, the Head Start model has essentially been subsidized by primarily of women of color,” said Katie Hamm, a deputy assistant secretary in the Office of Early Childhood Development. “We can’t ask them to continue doing that.”
The program is administered locally by nonprofits, social service agencies and school districts, which have some autonomy in setting pay scales.