NEWS:
Preschool Open Doors
Lt. Governor Sylvia Luke and executive director of PATCH Carol Wear share the good news about the Ready Keiki initiative's Preschool Open Doors (POD) expansion to a year-round application which includes 3- and 4-year olds. Applications are abeing accepted through January 31, 2025
The Preschool Open Doors program has been expanded, allowing families to apply at any time throughout the year on a rolling basis, instead of the previous fixed application period from January to the end of March.
The program provides monthly preschool tuition subsidies to qualified families for up to two years before kindergarten. Parents can choose any preschool licensed by the state Department of Human Services.
Lt. Gov. Sylvia Luke on Tuesday announced that the preschool tuition subsidy program is now accepting applications year-round.
The Preschool Open Doors program aims to give more children in Hawai‘i a chance to enroll in private preschools. The initiative is funded by the state Department of Human Services and administered by the organization People Attentive To Children, or PATCH.
Lt. Gov. Sylvia Luke, who is serving as Acting Governor, joined the state’s Department of Human Services to announce that the preschool tuition subsidy program, Preschool Open Doors, is now accepting applications on a year-round basis.
A preschool subsidy program through the state is expanding.
It's called Preschool Open Doors, and Tuesday afternoon Lt. Gov. Sylvia Luke announced the expansion.
Hawaii families needing help paying for preschool are encouraged to apply for a newly expanded state program that provides monthly tuition subsidies to qualified students.
The Preschool Open Doors program is now offered for 3 and 4-year-olds, and income eligibility limits were increased to support more working families.
Lt. Gov. Sylvia Luke said the state remains dedicated to expanding access to preschools all around the state. She said far too many children have been unable to go to preschool simply because there are not enough classrooms or their parents cannot afford private pre-school tuition.
An estimated 2,000 more preschool children across the state are expected to receive early childhood education through subsidies made possible after the Legislature in 2023 increased funding to $50 million from $12 million to expand the “Preschool Open Doors” program, Lt. Gov. Sylvia Luke announced Thursday in her fifth-floor office of the state Capitol.