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How 4-year-olds are giving Michigan districts an incentive to build, expand

July 11, 2026

Michigan is significantly expanding its free pre-kindergarten program by removing income restrictions that previously limited eligibility to low-income families, allowing all 4-year-olds to participate regardless of household income. School districts across the state are responding by renovating buildings, opening new early childhood centers, and consolidating programs, with some districts like Roseville using bond funding to convert entire elementary schools into facilities dedicated to pre-K and kindergarten students. The state has invested over $66 million in expansion grants since 2023, creating thousands of new classrooms, though the growth has created challenges for community-based childcare providers who face increased competition from public schools.

Who is affected

  • 4-year-old children across Michigan, particularly those now eligible under expanded income requirements
  • More than 55,000 students currently enrolled in the Great Start Readiness Program
  • Families of all income levels (previously only low-income families were eligible)
  • School districts across Michigan, including Roseville Community Schools, Plymouth-Canton Community Schools, and Kaleva Norman Dickson Schools
  • Community-based childcare providers like the Children of the Rising Sun Empowerment Center in Detroit
  • Preschool teachers and early childhood educators
  • Children with disabilities or suspected disabilities
  • Michigan's 56 intermediate school districts
  • Families in Kent County where enrollment is expected to double

What action is being taken

  • School districts are adding pre-K classrooms and renovating buildings for younger students
  • Roseville Community Schools is converting Fountain Elementary into an early childhood center
  • Kaleva Norman Dickson Schools is moving a pre-K program from a portable classroom into a new childhood center
  • Plymouth-Canton Community Schools is expanding from 18 to 21 classrooms
  • Districts are raising pay for preschool instructors to align with elementary teacher salaries
  • The state is distributing per-pupil funding to intermediate school districts for pre-K programs
  • Intermediate districts are providing training to community providers operating under waivers
  • Licensed home providers are participating in a pilot program offering free pre-K
  • More intermediate school districts are offering preschool for 3-year-olds through a state-funded pilot program
  • Aspiring early childhood educators are participating in training programs

Why it matters

  • Early childhood education research shows significant academic benefits, with students who attend preschool demonstrably ahead of peers who do not, particularly as kindergarten standards have increased. The expansion addresses Michigan's declining educational success rates while helping districts stabilize enrollment and engage families with public schools earlier, potentially increasing long-term retention in their K-12 systems. The initiative represents a major investment in educational equity by making pre-K accessible to all families regardless of income, though it creates competitive pressures for community-based providers and highlights systemic challenges around teacher retention, regulatory requirements, and special education support. Successfully implementing universal pre-K could provide foundational improvements to Michigan's educational outcomes while requiring careful attention to infrastructure, workforce development, and inclusive programming for students with disabilities.

What's next

  • Governor Gretchen Whitmer has not yet signed the education budget into law
  • House Republicans are pushing legislation to exempt public schools operating pre-K from being counted as child care facilities
  • Senate Democrats are pushing legislation to remove barriers to opening and operating centers
  • The Child Care Network expects comprehensive results from the licensed home provider pilot program by the end of August
  • Roseville Community Schools plans to complete the conversion of Fountain Elementary into an early childhood center by likely 2030
  • Plymouth-Canton hopes to eventually expand from 21 to 25 pre-K classrooms pending available space

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com