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Senate OKs law that prioritizes small providers over private-equity-controlled early-childhood programs
Summary
Senators voted to move private-equity-controlled early-care applicants to the end of the line for state endowment grants, while leaving exceptions for childcare "deserts." Proponents said it protects small local providers; opponents warned the measure could be arbitrary and legally risky.
The Senate voted to limit access by private-equity-controlled programs to funds from Connecticut's early childhood education endowment, telling state officials to prioritize local and smaller providers.
Sponsor Senator Marr said the change does not bar private investment but requires that programs with controlling private-equity ownership be funded only after other eligible programs have been served. "So it's a way of just making sure that we are allowing small providers and growing businesses in Connecticut before we fund private equity entities," Marr said in debate (SEG 3024-3042).
Debate focused on definitions of "private equity" and "controlling interest," with senators asking whether routine LLC structures or local partnerships could be swept up by the law. Senator Perillo sought clarity about whether two people forming an LLC and contributing capital would be treated as private equity; sponsors said the bill targets entities that aggregate capital investments from multiple outside investors and exercise parent-company control (SEG 2938-2952, 2966-2980).
A transparency amendment to require an annual publicly posted list of applicants who applied but did not receive funding was offered by Senator Perillo (LCO 5358); supporters described the list as a tool for future assessment, while the sponsor called it unfriendly; the amendment failed at roll call (SEG 3168-3213). The bill passed on a roll-call vote (24-12).
What's next: The Office of Early Childhood will implement the prioritization rule and the legislature will monitor outcomes; an administrative listkeeping amendment failed but proponents who opposed the amendment said they would consider further committee review next year.
Quote: "What we are saying is, potentially private equity has a financial incentive . . . it is potentially unstable," Marr said, arguing the endowment should build local capacity first (SEG 3038-3044).
