Overview:

The ongoing government shutdown has resulted in a funding lapse for Head Start, a program that provides comprehensive support services for low-income families with young children. As of November 1, 140 Head Start programs across 41 states and Puerto Rico have lost funding, and nearly 10% of all Head Start schools will shut down. This disproportionately affects Black pre-K schoolchildren who depend on the program for meals, health screenings, and family support services. Experts say that hundreds of thousands of children could soon fall behind as a result of the funding lapse.

As the government shutdown grinds on into its sixth week, Head Start, the iconic program designed to help children from low-income households improve school readiness, is now among the many federally funded services that have officially run out of money.ย 

Experts say that the funding lapse, effective Nov. 1, means hundreds of thousands of Black pre-K schoolchildren โ€” a disproportionate number of whom depend on the 1960s-era program for meals, health screenings, and family support services โ€” could soon fall behind.ย 

When the calendar changed, 140 Head Start programs across 41 states and Puerto Rico lost funding for the fiscal year, according to the National Head Start Association. On. Nov. 1, nearly 10% of all Head Start schools will shut down.ย 

Teacher and group of children learning about volcanos at science kindergarten project. Multiracial kids studying at elementary school. Education concept Credit: Vanessa Nunes

Since Head Start programsโ€™ funding cycles vary by month, some local programs have already shut down. Others can continue to function as their grants are still active.

Created as part of President Lyndon Johnsonโ€™s โ€œGreat Societyโ€ program, Head Start provides free, comprehensive support services for pregnant women and children from birth to age five to boost school readiness. Along with individualized school-readiness activities and nutrition aid, Head Start also provides health, dental, and developmental screenings, as well as referrals for specialized vision, hearing, and mental health services.

In 2024, the government funded Head Start to serve 716,000 infants and preschool children through community centers, family homes, and child care centers. About 29% of the youngsters enrolled in Head Start were Black.ย 

RELATED:ย Black Children Deserve to Be Childrenย 

โ€œHead Start isnโ€™t just an education program โ€” itโ€™s a promise of stability,โ€ Yasmina Vinci, the executive director of the National Head Start Association, said in a statement. โ€œWhen parents go to work or school, they do so knowing their children are safe, learning, and cared for. That sense of stability is priceless, and itโ€™s exactly whatโ€™s now at risk.โ€

Research shows that children enrolled in Head Start are more likely to see improvements in their health, such as dental screenings, than children who arenโ€™t enrolled in the program. The programsโ€™ positive effects are more pronounced among Black and Hispanic students, according to one study.ย 

Since Head Start programsโ€™ funding cycles vary by month, some local programs have already shut down. Others can continue to function after Nov. 1 because their grants are still active.ย 

RELATED: Childcare Costs Are Crushing Black Single Moms

Julie Stone, the executive director of the Ohio Head Start Association, says that seven programs have been disrupted due to the government shutdown, affecting 3,700 children and more than 900 staff members. Head Start programs in Coshocton and Allen Counties have developed contingency plans that will help them run for two more weeks starting on Monday, Nov. 3.ย 

However, Head Start programs in Ohioโ€™s rural Highland and Scioto counties will be forced to shut down, affecting about 700 children.

โ€œIt breaks my heart,โ€ she says. โ€œNo matter how this ends, itโ€™s been disruptive, and families and children are paying the price of the chaos. Those children and families are collateral damage of the shutdown.โ€ย 

YONKERS, NY โ€“ JULY 11: Kids play in the Westcop Whitney Young Head Start daycare facility in Yonkers, NY on July 11, 2013. The program will close by the end of July due to government sequestration, leaving many parents scrambling to find new daycare options for their kids. (Photo by Yana Paskova/For The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Juanita Yancey, the executive officer of the Georgia Head Start Association, estimates that the Head Start funding lapse will affect more than 6,000 families and 1,300 staff members. She says that the federal shutdown is pushing families to the โ€œbreaking point.โ€ย 

โ€œThe bottom line is children canโ€™t pause their development for political gridlock,โ€ she says. We need Congress and President Trump to act now.โ€ย 

Some Head Start programs have been scrambling for funds to keep their doors open.ย 

RELATED: What Happens When Childcare Centers Close?

In Georgia, the YMCA of Metro Atlanta โ€” the largest Head Start provider in Georgia โ€” teamed up with Sheltering Arms, a nonprofit early childhood care program, and Easter Seals of North Georgia to secure a 45-day bridge loan, according to Reuters.ย 

Lauren Koontz, YMCA of Metro Atlantaโ€™s president and CEO, said the cash โ€œgives us a temporary reprieve, but itโ€™s not a sustainable solution.โ€

Stakeholder organizations like hers โ€œneed Congress to end the shutdown and ensure these programs can continue to serve the children and families who depend on them,โ€ she said in a statement to local station WSB-TV. โ€œHead Start is more than just childcare. Itโ€™s a lifeline for families in underserved communities.โ€

This story was originally published on Word In Black on November 4th, 2025

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