Citizen Portal
Sign In

Get AI Briefings, Transcripts & Alerts on Local & National Government Meetings — Forever.

Lawmakers press MSDE on pre-K classroom shortfalls and role of private providers

Ways and Means Committee · May 1, 2026
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Delegates pressed MSDE and the AIB about how to meet pre-K demand after officials said nearly half of new full‑day pre‑K seats are in private settings and an interagency estimate suggested 200–500 additional classrooms could be needed if fully implemented.

Lawmakers at a joint Ways and Means and Appropriations briefing pressed state education officials on how the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future will meet demand for full-day pre-K seats, particularly given limits on public construction capacity.

Delegates pointed to an interagency commission estimate — relayed during the briefing — that full implementation could require 200 to 500 additional classrooms at about $1,000,000 apiece, and asked whether the state can realistically build that capacity. A committee member said the figure raised concerns about land, cost and timeline.

MSDE and AIB witnesses said the state is pursuing a mixed-delivery strategy that relies heavily on local partnerships and private providers. "Nearly 50 percent of new full-day seats are in private settings," one panelist noted, and AIB said local philanthropic investments have helped expand private pre-K participation in some counties.

Officials framed the classroom need as a multi-part challenge: capital capacity (classrooms), operating funding and provider participation. They said MSDE’s early-childhood assistant superintendent will lead cross-sector planning and that the department is prepared to share county-level breakdowns of private-provider seats and family child‑care participation when requested by the committee.

Lawmakers asked for more granular data: how many private family child‑care providers are delivering Blueprint seats, the county-level distribution of seats, and a clearer estimate of capital needs and potential funding options. The committee asked AIB and MSDE to provide county one-pagers and dashboards showing where new seats have been created and what gaps remain.

The briefing did not produce a specific funding plan for pre-K capital; lawmakers said they will use the NORC evaluation and the requested county breakdowns to weigh capital and operating options in forthcoming budget deliberations.