How to start an after-school program in South Dakota
South Dakota has more families who want after-school care than there are seats. This is a practical, step-by-step path to opening one — with the local numbers, the funding, and who to talk to.
Get the detailed South Dakota guide — free PDF →Step 1 · Confirm the need in South Dakota
Nationally, 22.6 million children are not in an after-school program even though their parents would enroll them if one were available — more than three in four of the kids whose families want a program. We don't yet have a South Dakota-specific demand figure published, but the shortage is nationwide. Start by talking to a few local families, a school counselor, or a principal about the hours that are hardest to cover.
Before you build, see what already exists so you fill a gap rather than duplicate one: programs & providers in South Dakota.
Step 2 · Choose a model
The model drives licensing, staffing, and funding. The common shapes:
- School-based — run inside a South Dakota school in partnership with the district. Easiest for transportation and trust.
- Community / nonprofit site — a church, community center, library, YMCA, or Boys & Girls Club hosts the program.
- Home- or small-business-based — smaller and usually licensed as child care; lower startup cost, tighter capacity.
- Enrichment / club — a focused offering (coding, art, sports) a few days a week; may be exempt from full licensing depending on hours.
Lead with one core promise — care, academics, or enrichment — even if you do all three.
Step 3 · Licensing & who's in charge
Programs that provide regular care below a certain age and above a set number of hours generally must be licensed as child care in South Dakota. Licensing covers staff ratios, background checks, facility safety, and director qualifications. Confirm exemptions with the state — don't assume.
Start here; they can point you to the office that licenses child care and administers 21st CCLC.
You'll also pick a legal structure (nonprofit, LLC, or under an existing org), carry liability insurance, and run background checks on every adult.
Step 4 · Fund it
Most programs blend several sources: family fees (often sliding-scale), federal 21st CCLC grants, state streams, and local/in-kind support. 21st CCLC is the only federal money dedicated to after-school — it flows to the state education agency, which awards competitive grants to local districts, nonprofits, and community organizations.
0 programs already share this funding — competitive, but active.
No dedicated state stream recorded for South Dakota yet. Local sources — city/county youth funds, foundations, United Way, and businesses — also fund after-school.
New to this funding? Read understanding 21st CCLC and what it pays for.
Step 5 · Space & staffing
Find a safe, right-sized space available after school — schools, churches, and rec centers are the usual hosts, and a host partnership often solves space and insurance at once. Staffing is your biggest cost and quality driver: meet (and beat) the state's required adult-to-child ratio, run background checks, and require first aid/CPR. A consistent, present site director matters most.
Step 6 · Daily program
Families judge a program by what happens between the bell and pickup. A reliable rhythm — snack, a homework/academic block, an enrichment activity, and active time — works. If academics are part of your promise, plan to align activities to what kids are learning in class.
Step 7 · Enroll & open
Spread the word through schools, local Facebook groups, libraries, pediatricians, and houses of worship. Keep registration simple, be clear about cost, and start a waitlist early — given South Dakota's demand, you'll likely fill up. Then focus on retention: consistent staff and real parent communication.
Get the detailed South Dakota start-up guide
The full step-by-step PDF — with South Dakota's demand numbers, 21st CCLC funding, who to contact for licensing, funding sources, and a launch checklist. Enter your email and we'll take you straight to it.
- Local need & funding, from public records
- The 7 steps to launch, condensed
- Who oversees programs in South Dakota
Free. We'll open the PDF as soon as you submit.
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