(DES MOINES) Iowa’s Head Start preschool network faces a sharp test after a new federal policy began requiring proof of legal citizenship or immigration status for children supported by federal funds. The change, effective in 2025, program directors say could shrink classrooms as soon as this fall.
The Head Start program run by Drake University in Des Moines, which serves about 1,000 children across six central Iowa counties, warns that citizenship verification at enrollment may discourage families and threaten funding tied directly to filled seats.

What changed and why it matters
Until now, Iowa’s Head Start programs did not require families to prove citizenship to enroll. The U.S. Department of Education has revised its interpretation of existing federal laws and is now applying eligibility screening across federally funded education programs, including early childhood services such as Head Start, career and technical education, and adult education.
- The change is effective immediately in 2025, according to program officials.
- People without legal status are now barred from participating in programs backed by federal dollars.
- Because federal grants for Head Start are often tied to enrollment counts, even modest drops in registration can force downsizing or reduced services.
Immediate operational impacts reported in Iowa
Drake University’s Head Start director, Lisa Proctor, said staff are uncertain how the new process will work in practice or how many families will step back when asked for proof.
- She worries the policy undercuts Head Start’s 60-year mission to welcome high-need children without barriers.
- A drop in registrations could force reduced services across partner centers in Polk and neighboring counties.
Other Iowa education leaders report similar confusion. College administrators and district staff say they are waiting for detailed instructions that do not clash with state privacy protections for students.
As of August 18, 2025, Iowa program directors said they had not received clear step-by-step guidance for verifying a child’s status while keeping records secure and limiting exposure for families.
How this interacts with state preschool expansions
The federal eligibility change arrives while the state continues to grow preschool options for four-year-olds through the Statewide Voluntary Preschool Program and related initiatives.
- Those state-backed efforts are distinct from Head Start and are not the focus of the federal change.
- However, because Head Start serves many low-income households, even small enrollment shifts can ripple through neighborhoods, affecting:
- access to speech therapy
- family support services
- referrals often routed through classroom teachers
Program staff also expect heavier administration:
- Intake teams must check documents.
- They must log decisions and respond to appeals.
- They must manage start-of-year transitions.
For a site serving 1,000 children, even short delays can push back developmental screenings and bus routes, inconveniencing working parents whose schedules are already stretched.
What families may be asked to provide
Families are trying to sort out what paperwork is needed. Program guidance circulating in Iowa indicates parents may be asked to present proof of their child’s legal status to enroll in Head Start. Examples listed include:
- A U.S. passport or consular birth record
- Immigration documents for non-citizen children
- Other lawful proof issued by a government agency
Directors caution that the exact list could change once federal and state agencies publish detailed rules. They warn the verification step may discourage even eligible families—especially those who fear providing documents or who struggle to obtain copies from home countries. Some parents may delay applications, which can lead to empty seats in August and September, when funding formulas are set.
Broader education and workforce implications
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, similar verification rules are extending into community colleges and short-term career training. Potential effects include:
- Reduced access for undocumented or non-citizen residents
- Long-term impacts on local workforce pipelines
- Concerns among Iowa colleges about turning away students who qualify only for state-only offerings while remaining ineligible for federal aid
State-level activity adds another layer. A 2025 bill in the Iowa Legislature, HF165 (formerly HSB30), would require students to pass the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services naturalization civics test as a condition for high school graduation or equivalency diplomas. While separate from the Head Start policy, advocates note the messaging effect such proposals can have on immigrant households with preschool-aged children.
Practical questions program directors want answered
Iowa directors are seeking clarity on operational and legal issues, including:
- Which documents are acceptable for preschoolers born abroad?
- How should programs respond if parents decline to disclose status?
- Can agencies share immigration data across systems without breaching state privacy laws?
- Will families who lose access to Head Start qualify for any state-only early childhood slots to avoid gaps in care?
Why Head Start access matters beyond preschool
Head Start has long functioned as a front door to services, linking families to:
- free meals
- hearing and vision screenings
- behavioral supports
- transportation
Restricting entry through citizenship verification may cut off those touchpoints for children who would otherwise be assessed and helped early. That risk keeps directors like Proctor focused on enrollment even as they await compliance instructions.
Program leaders emphasize the goal remains stable classrooms for three- and four-year-olds whose learning depends on predictable routines.
What families and providers can do now
Drake University’s Head Start team says it will prepare families without alarming them and will communicate any new steps once federal and state agencies issue written guidance. In the meantime:
- Parents are encouraged to keep basic identity records accessible.
- Ask front-desk staff how the program will protect any documents presented during enrollment.
- Stay alert for official guidance.
Officials say the policy is federal and that guidance will follow. Families can watch the Office of Head Start at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ohs for updates on procedures, timelines, privacy protections, and data safeguards.
This Article in a Nutshell
A 2025 federal rule now requires citizenship verification for Head Start, threatening enrollment at Drake University’s 1,000-child program. Directors warn families may withdraw, reducing seats and linked federal funding. Unclear guidance on acceptable documents and privacy protections leaves staff scrambling to balance compliance with protecting vulnerable children and families.