Hope Starts Here is an initiative that connects and mobilizes resources to strengthen Detroit’s early childhood education system. It is facilitated by IFF.
By: Wendy Lewis Jackson, managing director, Detroit Program, Kresge Foundation and Faye Alexander Nelson, Michigan director, W.K. Kellogg Foundation
A Harvard report found that investing in early childhood education programs provides opportunities to children that lead to upward economic mobility later in life. Children who participate in quality early childhood experiences have many positive and lasting gains, including that they are less likely to be retained in a grade, more likely to graduate from high school and have more opportunity for economic advancement. Yet, one in three working families still struggles to find the early childhood care and education they need to give their children a strong start and set them up for success. Another recent report says the child care shortage costs Michigan’s economy $2.88 billion a year.
In 2016, more than 18,000 Detroit residents came together to address this challenge and develop a model to increase access to quality early childhood care and education for children from birth through age 8. They called their model Hope Starts Here, and they identified six imperatives to make Detroit a city that puts young children first by 2027.
Since then, the W.K. Kellogg and Kresge Foundations, alongside IFF, which facilitates the initiative, have convened a group of community-based leaders into an advisory committee that we co-chair. The actual work of creating a more equitable early childhood system is done by nonprofit and community-based partners operating in the six imperative areas identified by the community.
The six imperatives and nonprofit leaders are:
Since the launch of Hope Starts Here in 2017, and despite the COVID-19 pandemic, these partners have already accomplished a lot through the advocacy and outreach:
We are proud of those accomplishments, and yet we acknowledge that a lot more needs to be done to properly support the children of Detroit. At last count, 23,000 children in Detroit still lack access to quality early learning programs. All of Hope Starts Here’s imperative partners must continue to work together to serve Detroit’s children and families, coordinate systems and create more equitable access to quality early learning opportunities. The W.K. Kellogg and Kresge Foundations remain committed to Hope Starts Here, continuing to invest $5 million over the next two years. And our partners throughout the city are committed to moving their efforts forward in collaboration.
As we move forward, we are excited for ongoing opportunities to partner with providers, families and community leaders in Detroit to build a stronger, more cohesive, and more sustainable ecosystem. There are many opportunities that lie ahead in Detroit: from the efforts by Hope Starts Here partners to streamline the experiences of families and providers to increased public funding for early childhood programs. And we know there are many more opportunities resulting from our state leaders in Lansing: from expanding Pre-K to all four-year-olds in Michigan, to unprecedented state investments in early educators, to ensuring that all eligible Detroit families are able to access the child care subsidy.
Hope Starts Here is ready to meet this moment – to bring partners together to envision Detroit as a city that puts its children first. We invite you to join us by connecting with one of our partners to learn how your voice can help shape this effort.