Reflections: The Choo Choo Train to Nowhere

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As a father, grandfather, and leader of a nonprofit organization, I am passionately committed to early education for our children. Unfortunately, over half of our children in Hawai‘i are not attending preschool and entering kindergarten without being able to count to five or differentiate colors. They quickly become those left behind and those that become a tremendous drag on our educational system and, later in life, our community in general. One proven avenue of dealing with this educational reality is a robust investment in early education of 0-5 year old children and their caregivers. The Federal Reserve System points to a minimum of seven dollars of avoided social costs for every dollar invested in early education. The Annie E. Casey Foundation has recently published an exhaustive study that says early education and preparing children to read at grade level by the end of third grade is crucial to success for the students, and makes a sobering statement:

92% of those not reading at grade level by the end of third grade will not graduate from high school.

Each of those represent a $2.4 million dollar cost to the community over his/her lifetime. In Hawai‘i, 70% of fourth graders are not proficient in reading (2015 KIDS COUNT Data Book). We are not alone; another community, Charlotte, North Carolina, has only forty percent of their third grade students reading at third grade level. The gap in reading proficiency between low-income and higher-income children has grown in the past decade, and Hawai‘i was found to have one of the largest increases in the nation with 83% of lower income students scoring below proficient reading level, compared to 57% of higher income students. This gap often starts early.

What does this have to do with the Choo Choo Train? Let me share with you what is happening in Honolulu. We have embarked on a very controversial $7-8 billion investment in rail transit (the final cost keeps inflating and the advantages keep getting increasingly unfocused). However, there is a total lack of comprehensive early education investment in the State.

Hawai‘i is one of 15 states with small or no state-funded preschool program.

The lower income and middle income families are the ones who suffer because of this, as they are not able to afford preschool. Studies have shown that the foundation for school and life success begins early and the impact of early investments is strongest for children facing adversity. Quality, affordable early childhood education not only benefits the child for the rest of his/her life, but has shown to return much more benefits to the community than its cost (reductions in remedial education and crime costs, increase in taxes paid; a cost-benefit analysis of the Perry Preschool study found those who attended preschool pay $38,000-$75,000 more in taxes over his or her lifespan than a child who did not attend).

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For a very small fraction of the Choo Choo Train’s cost you would have a social return on investment (ROI) of significant proportions! You do the numbers. If you were an investor, which investment would you select? As it stands, we will have a very expensive, dubiously efficient, and probably little used transportation system that will be trying to move an increasingly dysfunctional community. A community beset with issues rooted to a lack of investment early on in the lives of our children and their families. What do you think? I think, shame on us!

4 thoughts on “Reflections: The Choo Choo Train to Nowhere

  1. Jin's avatar Jin

    Adopting such a perspective requires us to move beyond what bombards us on a daily basis: gridlock and traffic. But that’s the point right? Misdirection. “Hey! No need to worry about educating kids. We get ’em. Worry about traffic. Look! We’re building the rail to help you.” Misdirection. Until too late!

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  2. Don's avatar Don

    If the state of Hawaii would put the $7-8 billion towards the education system we would have one of the best public school systems in the nation. If we had that parents wouldn’t have to drive their kids to private schools in town causing the bulk of the traffic. If parents didn’t have to pay the tuition to private schools then we wouldn’t need to have both parents working full time jobs once again reducing traffic and allowing parents to spend more quality time with their children which would improve our schools and our community over all, and not just the west side of Oahu this would help the whole state since one way or another the whole state is paying for it. The money spent to upgrade the schools would bring more construction jobs to local people not mainland companies. Our schools would have the air conditioning that they will not get for years with the current way of thinking. For once think out of the box and get something done instead of seeing who will pad the government officials pockets the most.

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