Governor Shapiro Hosts 2026 Easter Egg Hunt at Governor's Residence
Summary
Governor Josh Shapiro and First Lady Lori Shapiro hosted Pennsylvania's 2026 Annual Easter Egg Hunt at the Governor's Residence, welcoming pre-K students from across the Commonwealth. The fourth annual event, held in partnership with Pre-K for PA, highlighted the Shapiro Administration's commitment to early childhood education and child care investments, including $25 million in recruitment and retention grants, $7.5 million for Pre-K Counts, and $421.3 million for the Child Care Works Program.
What changed
Governor Josh Shapiro hosted Pennsylvania's fourth annual Easter Egg Hunt at the Governor's Residence, bringing together pre-K students, families, early learning advocates, and educators to highlight the importance of accessible, affordable child care and early education programs. The event emphasized the Shapiro Administration's multi-year investments in early childhood education, including $25 million in retention bonuses for approximately 55,000 child care employees, $7.5 million for Pre-K Counts wage increases, and continued funding of $421.3 million for the Child Care Works Program supporting up to 75,000 low-income families.\n\nAffected parties including families, child care providers, and early learning advocates should monitor for updates on the Governor's proposed 2026-27 budget, which builds on existing investments while maintaining seven tax cuts. The event serves as a platform to reinforce advocacy for high-quality, accessible early learning opportunities rather than creating any new regulatory obligations or compliance requirements.
What to do next
- Monitor for updates
Archived snapshot
Apr 16, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Governor and First Lady Shapiro Welcome Children, Parents, and the Easter Bunny for the 2026 Annual Easter Egg Hunt, Highlight Importance of Investing in Early Childhood Education
The fourth hosted by the Shapiros, Pennsylvania’s Annual Easter Egg Hunt highlights the importance of high-quality, accessible early learning opportunities.
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The Governor’s 2026-27 proposed budget builds on his commitment to creating better schools, healthier families, and safer communities.
April 15, 2026
Harrisburg, PA – Today, Governor Josh Shapiro and First Lady Lori Shapiro welcomed pre-K students from across the Commonwealth to Pennsylvania's 2026 Annual Easter Egg Hunt at the Governor's Residence. This is the fourth Easter Egg Hunt the Shapiros have hosted to highlight the importance of high-quality, accessible early learning programs to give our youngest Pennsylvanians a step up.
This year’s Easter Egg Hunt at the Governor’s Residence was hosted in partnership with Pre-K for PA, and featured a photo station with the Easter Bunny, a craft table for kids, a reading corner hosted by the Pennsylvania State Library, and a live animal exhibit with baby goats, provided by the Real Batz Farm in Grantville, PA.
“Every child in Pennsylvania deserves the freedom to chart their own course and the opportunity to succeed – and that freedom has to start with affordable, accessible, high quality child care and early learning opportunities for Pennsylvania families,” said Governor Shapiro. “Welcoming these kids to the Residence brings so much light to the work we do each day on their behalf. My Administration is steadfast in our commitment to their success — and we’ll continue to fight for the investments we need to fund high quality early childhood education programs.”
Today’s event also brought together early learning advocates and educators to highlight the importance of investing in accessible, affordable child care and early education.
In addition to expanding the Pennsylvania Child and Dependent Care Enhancement and Employer Child Care Contribution Tax Credits during his first term, in the 2025-26 Budget Governor Shapiro delivered:
A new $25 million investment in recruitment and retention grants to provide approximately 55,000 child care employees with up to $630 in retention bonuses.
An additional $7.5 million investment into the Pre-K Counts program to help providers raise wages and stabilize the early educator workforce.
$10 million increase for the Student Teacher Stipend Program, helping address educator shortages and make teaching a more accessible and rewarding career path – raising the annual amount available for the initiative to $30 million.
Continued funding for the Child Care Works Program, supporting up to 75,000 low-income families to continue to be enrolled in subsidized childcare with a total investment of $421.3 million.
The Governor’s 2026-27 proposed budget builds on this success and continues to invest in child care and early childhood education while maintaining each of the seven tax cuts he has signed into law. The budget proposal includes:
$10 million to support retention and recruitment grants for employees at child care centers licensed through the federal Child Care Works program, bringing the total investment to $35 million.
$7.5 million for the Pre-K Counts program and $2 million for the Head Start State Supplemental program to help providers raise wages and strengthen the early childhood workforce.
$5 million for student teacher stipends, for a total of $35 million annually, to make it more feasible for aspiring educators to complete their training and pursue careers that will shape the minds of some of our youngest Pennsylvanians.
From day one, Governor Shapiro has been committed to creating better schools, healthier families, and safer communities — and in the last three years, his Administration has secured historic investments in early childhood education, while working to address critical workforce shortages.
Read the Governor’s proposed budget in brief here .
Media Contacts
Governor's Press Office
ra-gvgovpress@pa.gov 717-783-1116 Governor's Office Media
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