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President Donald Trump speaks during a cabinet meeting on Tuesday at the White House in Washington.
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Some 6,500 children in Hawaii would lose their afterschool program, if the budget proposal the president sent to Congress on March 11 makes it into law.
Despite years of research proving that afterschool and summer- learning programs keep kids safe, inspire them to learn, and help relieve working parents of worries about what their children are up to in the afternoon hours and during long summer days, the president’s budget would eliminate the 21st Century Community Learning Centers. That’s the principal federal funding stream for afterschool and summer learning programs and, without it, some 1.7 million children across the nation will lose the afterschool programs their families rely on.
That’d be a tragedy. Children would be left without supervision. They’d lose terrific learning opportunities, particularly in the STEM subject (science, technology, engineering and mathematics), language arts, music, physical activity and nutrition.
Fortunately, Congress doesn’t have to rubber-stamp the president’s afterschool mistake. I urge our members of Congress to increase, not eliminate, federal funding for afterschool programs.
Paula Adams
Executive director, Hawai‘i Afterschool Alliance
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