Head Start programs have been slammed nationwide by Republican sequestration cuts, and Community Action in Topeka, Kansas is no exception — it’s considering a plan “that will close one pre-school class, eliminating 20 enrollment slots for pre-schoolers,” and “close one Early Head Start class, cutting 8 infant/ toddler slots.”
As one might imagine, local families aren’t pleased, but their member of Congress has an explanation for the mess.
What made this particular news segment notable was the lawmaker who appeared in it to argue that these outcomes could have been avoided.
“None of those cuts have to be made there,” Rep. Lynn Jenkins (R-Kansas) told the station. “That is a choice by the administration, so we are going to continue to put pressure on the administration.”
Jenkins is terribly confused, and it’s unfortunate that she appeared on local television repeating a message that isn’t true.
Let’s set the record straight. The whole point of the sequester policy was to mandate inflexible, across-the-board cuts. Jenkins should understand this — she voted for it.
This is not “a choice by the administration” — newsflash: the Obama White House supports universal pre-K, not steep spending cuts to Head Start — the specific purpose of the policy is to ensure it isn’t up to the administration.









