The education department says it has now been able to offer a seat to every family that applied for the 3-K program.

When offers initially went out in May, about 2,400 families out of the 42,000 who applied did not get matched with any program.

The education department says it has added 1,500 seats and some families have moved off waitlists.

That allows them to extend offers to all families — though that doesn’t necessarily mean the offer will be a program the family wants to attend or one that’s close to their home.

According to the city, it’s also on track to provide new special education pre-school seats, which were funded in the new city budget.

Officials estimate 300 children will need a seat this fall and have applied to the state to operate 258 seats.

They expect to get approval in time to open the classrooms this fall.

The city has also identified classrooms for another 400 seats that could open later in the year to meet projected future needs.

This comes after advocates sounded the alarm earlier this month that the city had not applied to the state to open the new seats.