Brigid Schulte
Director, Better Life Lab
The 麻豆果冻传媒 Care Report examines the cost, quality, and availability of child care across the United States.
In the past 50 years, the experience of the American family has undergone a sea change. In the mid-twentieth century, breadwinner-homemaker families were not only more the norm, but held up as the ideal. Today, there is . And in a majority of families with children under 18, all parents work for pay outside the home. That means, on any given day, about 12 million children under the age of five will need a safe place to go and someone loving to care for them.
On any given day, about 12 million children under the age of five will need a safe place to go and someone loving to care for them.
A good early care and learning system should support the healthy development of children, particularly at a time when their brains are rapidly growing and laying the foundation for all future learning. A functioning system should sustain the financial stability and health of families, promote opportunity and equity, support and sustain businesses, and help the economy thrive. And an effective system should be built on three pillars: affordable cost, high quality, and easy availability.
That is not happening in the current fragmented, patchwork system.
The Care Index, a data and methodology collaboration between 麻豆果冻传媒, , and others, examined cost, quality, and availability data in all 50 states and the District of Columbia and found that no single state does well in all three categories. Instead, families, providers, and policymakers in every state make difficult compromises that often shape family decisions and can determine the course of children鈥檚 futures.
Explore the Care Index, or download our full Care Report.
The Care Index found that child care is expensive, even though caregivers make poverty wages; that care can be difficult to find, and that, though quality is difficult to measure, only a handful of centers and family homes are nationally accredited for quality. More specifically, the Care Index found:
The short version, then, is that the Care Index found that the early care and learning system isn鈥檛 working. For anyone.
But this is meant to be the beginning, not the conclusion, of this conversation. The 麻豆果冻传媒 Care Report uses the Care Index as a jumping off point to explore the complexity of the fragmented child care system. Using the Care Index cumulative scores, we divided states into quartiles, from highest to lowest, and traveled with a video crew to one state in each quartile in each region of the country to report on the consequences of the trade-offs between cost, quality and availability.
We profile a caregiver in Massachusetts, one of the highest rated states in the Care Index, who still makes poverty wages and relies on food stamps after decades doing a job she loves and considers important.
We write about Georgia, in the second quartile, a state that was one of the first to adopt a universal pre-K program, where infant care is nevertheless so expensive, low quality and difficult to find that one family began paying $1,450 a month, on top of the $1,375 for their three-year-old, just to reserve one of the few spots in a quality center before their child was even born.
In Illinois, in the third quartile, we tell the story of the owner of a high-quality Montessori School who, instead of turning away low-income children when a state budget crisis wiped out funding for child care subsidies, took out a high risk personal loan.
And in New Mexico, a state with one of the lowest cumulative scores, the highest rate of child poverty and a growing population of children who speak a language other than English at home, we show how the high cost of care has driven many families into the cheaper, informal gray market.
The Care Index鈥榮 findings are drawn from a variety of sources including unique, proprietary Care.com cost data, including the cost of nanny care, and a new Care.com national survey of more than 15,000 households with children under 18 in every state conducted in October 2015, as well as data from the U.S. Census, and the National Association for the Education of Young Children, among other sources.
The 麻豆果冻传媒 Care Report proposes systemic change to the early care and learning infrastructure, including additional public and private investment in early care and learning; better training; pay and professionalization of the teaching workforce; as well as select innovative policy recommendations to help make high quality care more affordable and accessible to all families, including:
In 1971, critics who supported a veto against a bipartisan bill that would have created a high quality, affordable child care system available to all said they not only wanted to kill the bill, but . They a comprehensive system would force women out of the home and into the workforce, and rip children from their mothers鈥 arms to be warehoused. Yet since the 1990s, without the support of any policies, a majority of mothers have worked outside the home, and a majority of American children have been cared for by someone other than their mother from the time children were six weeks old. Studies have found that, contrary to public fears, . And that quality early care and education can have lasting positive impacts, providing a . The U.S. military invests in and runs the most effective child care system in the country, seeing it as . U.S. businesses cover very little of the cost of care, by some estimates. Yet absenteeism and lost productivity due to child care crises cost them about $4 billion a year.
If the child care system isn鈥檛 working for anyone, why has there been no movement for change? In no small part because families, who foot about 60 percent of the cost of early care and learning, have no time. They鈥檙e too busy trying to find their way in our abysmal child care system to change it. 鈥淚t would be the right thing to try to find a solution,鈥 one family juggling the high cost of care for three children told us, echoing a theme we heard again and again. 鈥淏ut right now, we have no choice, we鈥檙e just in survival mode.鈥
A truly comprehensive system would give families real choices for how to combine their work and home lives. 聽The data and stories in the Care Index and the 麻豆果冻传媒 Care Report are offered as guideposts, to give families, advocates, providers, teachers and policymakers the information needed to move beyond survival mode; to get a clearer picture of where we are and the choices we need to make to move forward on creating an early care and learning infrastructure that works for everyone.
The Care Index, a data and methodology collaboration between 麻豆果冻传媒, and others, examines cost, quality, and availability data in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. It shows that no single state does well in all three categories.
| Field | Overview |
|---|---|
| Cost in Home | Average cost of in-home child care, or nanny care, in a state. |
| Cost in Center | Average cost of child care - in a child care center or family child care home - in a state. |
| Average Cost | Average cost of in-home and in-center care in a state, based on proportion of in-home and in-center users. |
| Cost as % of Household Income | Expected cost of child care as a percentage of median household income for each state. |
| Cost as % of Minimum Wage | Expected cost of child care as a percentage of minimum wage for each state. |
| Quality | Standardized quality score based on the proportion of accredited family child care homes and centers and ratings for in-home providers on Care.com, where 100 is the national mean, and each 15 points represents one standard deviation from the mean. |
| Availability | Standardized availability score based on the ratio of child care employees to the number of children under 5 in a state, where 100 is the national average, and each 15 points represents one standard deviation from the mean. |
| Care Index Score | Overall Care Index assessment of each state based on standardized cost, quality, and availability scores. |
It鈥檚 6:45 am on a Monday morning. Monyatta Carter has already been up for over an hour, getting herself ready for work and feeding the family鈥檚 four dogs, one floppy rabbit, and the fish scattered in the 11 aquariums that line the living room and front hall of their rented house in Conyers, Ga. She鈥檚 started a load of laundry, found the lid to her husband鈥檚 coffee cup, packed two tiny pink backpacks emblazoned with the cartoon princesses of the Disney movie Frozen, dressed the baby in a red Minnie Mouse tank top with bright blue leggings, and is struggling mightily to get three-year-old September out of her bedroom.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 wanna go to school!鈥 the child wails, her legs locking. Carter balances 17-month old Temi on her hip, plastic bowls of grapes and strawberries for the girls to eat in the car in one hand, and, with the other, pulls September down the carpeted hallway toward the front door.
鈥淚 know,鈥 Carter says evenly. 鈥淏ut you know we gotta go, Sprout.鈥
Throughout the morning routine, Carter constantly checks her smartphone to keep track of the time. To get to work by 9 a.m., drop the girls off at their family home care center, about 15 miles away, and drive another 20 to get to work, Carter has to be pulling out of the driveway no later than 7:30 a.m. If she鈥檚 lucky and the traffic is light, she鈥檒l sometimes stop at the McDonald鈥檚 drive-through for a cup of coffee for breakfast.
Carter, 39, works in Decatur as a medical coder for Emory Healthcare. When she began looking for early care and learning, she wanted the girls close to her work in case of emergencies. Their care is primarily her responsibility. Her husband owns his own mobile detailing business and has an unpredictable schedule. Her extended family lives miles away in South Georgia. And her three older children from her first marriage are busy working and going to college.
Her first choice was her own employer鈥檚 on-site child development center, one of the best in the area, and only three minutes from her office. But she despaired when she discovered it was going to cost her about $1,840 a month, or $22,000 a year for an infant and toddler, even with her employee discount. That鈥檚 more than her rent and about as much as she takes home. She debated staying home. But her job provides not only steady income, but also the family鈥檚 health insurance. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 afford to work. And I couldn鈥檛 afford not to work,鈥 she explains as she wrestles the girls into their car seats, checks the time on her phone, and hurriedly brushes an unexpected army of ants out of the car.
I wanted more than just a babysitter. I want my girls to have individual attention. I want them safe. I want them to learn. I want someone to be accountable if something happens. And I want to be comfortable where I leave my kids, and not worry about them while I鈥檓 at work.
She began searching for licensed, high-quality care as close to her office as she could find. And the closest place that she felt was a good fit and that she could afford was 20 miles away, in a small family child care home that takes no more than six children at a time in Lithonia, about halfway between her work and her house. Care for the two costs $13,440 a year. But a small, privately-funded 鈥淏oost鈥 scholarship, run by Quality Care for Children, an Atlanta-based nonprofit, to help low-income families get ahead, is picking up about $3,000 of that for now. 鈥淭hat has helped the family budget tremendously. I didn鈥檛 want to have to choose between paying for child care and paying for food,鈥 she explains. 鈥淏ut I wanted more than just a babysitter. I want my girls to have individual attention. I want them safe. I want them to learn. I want someone to be accountable if something happens. And I want to be comfortable where I leave my kids, and not worry about them while I鈥檓 at work.鈥
After a winding drive on backroads, September now chattering happily, Carter pulls into the driveway of a cheerful yellow clapboard house with a small addition on the side. She untangles the girls from the car, gingerly carrying Temi, who鈥檚 fallen asleep, and knocks on the little green door. As she hands the girls over to the home care provider, a smiling Antoinette Elliott, Carter braces for tears from Temi. It always breaks Carter鈥檚 heart when the baby cries as she leaves. She takes a deep breath. Next year, she thinks. Next year, September will be four, and she鈥檒l enter the lottery in the hopes of getting one of the slots in Georgia鈥檚 free universal pre-K program. The morning commute may be worse, taking the girls to two different places, but the break on the family budget will be a relief. Carter checks her phone again for the time. Traffic will be piling up. It鈥檚 time to get to work.
Monyatta Carter鈥檚 struggles with early care and learning are hardly unique. In interviews with dozens of families across Georgia, parents shared stories of how they are forced to make choices between cost, quality, and availability every day when it comes to finding care for their children. Moreover, those difficult trade-offs often shape their lives and can determine the course of their children鈥檚 futures.
The inability to find or afford quality early care is the reason why some families, like Jaime White鈥檚, decided not to have more children, even though they鈥檇 hoped to. Already, the Whites pay $44,000 a year, more than their mortgage, to ensure their children have high quality care. The lack of early care is why parents in some families, like Ashley Henderson鈥檚, work split shifts and rarely see each other. The lack of early care is why some parents, typically mothers, dropped out of the workforce, even though they didn鈥檛 want to. 鈥淐hild care can affect the direction of your whole life, the unattainability of it. It certainly has for me,鈥 said Michelle Cawley Burg of Lilburn, who reluctantly quit her job when she had no paid family leave and couldn鈥檛 afford child care. Ten years out of the workforce and five children later, she鈥檚 starting all over again.
Caree Jackson Cotwright, a professor at the University of Georgia in Athens, faxed the university鈥檚 on-site child development center the day she gave birth to her first daughter to get her on their waiting list. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 not because I鈥檓 crazy,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 normal.鈥 She felt lucky to get a spot six months later.
For many struggling families, like single mother Raysean Hawkins, a patient care tech who lost her child care subsidy after picking up an extra 12-hour shift to better provide for her two children, the lack of affordable, high-quality early care can keep parents stuck and unable to climb the economic ladder. Hawkins dreams of going to college to get ahead in life. But Georgia is one of that do not help low-income parents offset the cost of early care if they鈥檙e enrolled in a four-year college program or two-year associate degree program. For children, research has found that a majority of the achievement gap at age 14 was already present on the first day of kindergarten, and that the disparity in cognitive skills at age four between low- and high-income children in the United States is already among the largest in all of the advanced economies. 鈥淗ow can you get up the financial ladder when you鈥檙e constantly being pulled down?鈥 Hawkins says. 鈥淐hild care is crazy.鈥
How can you get up the financial ladder when you鈥檙e constantly being pulled down?鈥 Hawkins says. 鈥淐hild care is crazy.
And Georgia, compared to other states, does early care and learning pretty well.
In the Care Index, a data and methodology collaboration between 麻豆果冻传媒 and Care.com, Georgia ranked in the second quartile, 18th out of the 50 states, scoring in the top 15 on quality and availability, but falling to 31st in terms of affordability. Though quality is difficult to measure, 11 percent of centers and family homes in the state are nationally accredited for quality. The Care Index found that the average cost of full-time infant care in a child care center or family home center outstrips the average cost of in-state college tuition and fees in the state. For a family earning minimum wage, the average cost of child care in a center for all children under five eats up more than half their income. Nanny care, the Index found, runs $27,729 a year, more than two and a half times the average rent in the state.
What Georgia does well, however, is its early and pioneering embrace of early childhood education. Georgia was among the first states, along with Massachusetts and Washington, to create a stand-alone Department of Early Care and Learning. 聽鈥淲e don鈥檛 talk about daycare here,鈥 one state official said. 鈥淲e talk about early learning.鈥
Both Democratic and Republican governors have campaigned on and later supported the expansion of one of the first universal pre-kindergarten programs in the country. The state has invested more than $6 billion in state lottery funds over 25 years to make high quality pre-K available to 1.4 million children. Though demand still outstrips a supply鈥攂etween 5,000 and 8,000 children sit on the waiting list every year鈥攖he system currently serves more than 80,000 children annually, or nearly 60 percent of the state鈥檚 four year olds. That falls just short of the in the District of Columbia, Vermont, Oklahoma, and Florida that reach more than 70 percent of their four-year populations. But it far outstrips others: 12 states serve less than 10 percent of their four-year-olds, and seven states have no pre-K program at all.
That investment in pre-K in Georgia is paying off. contracted by the state have found that children from all backgrounds are benefitting from the program, making gains across all domains. And that those who don鈥檛 speak English at home, a fast-growing population, begin the year with lower skills than their English-speaking peers, but learn at a faster rate and make large gains throughout the year. 聽鈥淎nd those gains tend to continue beyond the pre-K program,鈥 said University of North Carolina research scientist Ellen Peisner-Feinberg, who is studying a representative sample of Georgia children from pre-K through third grade.
I don鈥檛 think that early learning is a partisan issue. It鈥檚 a bipartisan issue. I think how you pay for it is a partisan issue. And we鈥檙e working on that here in Georgia.
Further, a of child care in Georgia found that it is a $4.7 billion a year industry, on par with the pharmaceutical and the hotel/motel sectors, creating nearly 85,000 direct and indirect jobs, serving 337,000 children and enabling more than a half million parents to work each year and pay taxes on $24 billion in income. 鈥淟egislators and business leaders now see that the child care industry is an important economic driver in the state,鈥 said Amy Jacobs, commissioner of the Department of Early Care and Learning for Republican Gov. Nathan Deal. The economic impact data got both Republican and Democratic lawmakers鈥 attention, she said. Now, the brain research showing that in the first few years of life, a child鈥檚 brain is making 700 to 1,000 critical new neural connections every second, forming the foundation upon which all later learning will be built, is pushing lawmakers to take action. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 dispute that research. And I think Republicans and Democrats are starting to listen,鈥 Jacobs added. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that early learning is a partisan issue. It鈥檚 a bipartisan issue. I think how you pay for it is a partisan issue. And we鈥檙e working on that here in Georgia.鈥
But that also gets at the heart of the current struggle in Georgia: what to do about the babies.
The cities of Atlanta and Marietta, along with major employers headquartered in the state, like Home Depot and Coca Cola, offer paid family leave to new parents. But most workers in the state, as in the rest of the country, get little or no paid family leave and new, adoptive, and foster parents must either use their own vacation or sick time, take unpaid leave, or seek child care and return to work within weeks of the baby鈥檚 arrival. Nearly one in four mothers, , return to work within two weeks.
In Georgia, as in the rest of the country, infant care is hard to find, often wildly expensive and, a found, pretty bad. Nearly 70 percent of all licensed infant and toddler classrooms in Georgia were rated as low quality, with children in environments 鈥渋nadequate for their health and safety鈥 that 鈥渄o not promote their cognitive and social-emotional development.鈥 And though the care was that bad among licensed providers, the state has no idea about the experience of children in small, unregulated settings鈥攑eople may care for up to two children unrelated to them for pay without needing to obtain training or a license鈥攐r on the cheaper 鈥済ray market鈥 of informal care provided by family, friends, and neighbors.
鈥淭hat was a real clarion call for us,鈥 Jacobs said.
With a $51 million federal Race to the Top grant through the end of 2017 and an additional $14 million raised from the private sector, the state has a new plan to boost the quality of infant and toddler programs through efforts like creating the Quality-Rated Improvement System, giving more generous subsidies to low-income families who choose higher-rated child care establishments, and offering scholarships to teachers to seek more training鈥攖he key to quality care. In addition, the governor added $25 million from state lottery funds in May 2016 to raise pre-K teacher salaries and bring them more in line with K-12 teachers.
The plan, however, does not call for raising the salaries of teachers in infant and toddler classrooms. Nationally, those who teach infants and toddlers of what those who teach three- and four-year-olds make. Which is little enough. In Georgia, the for all early childhood workers, $9.16 an hour, hasn鈥檛 changed since 2010, and more than half of workers鈥 families are on some form of public assistance. Nannies in the state make slightly less than the national average of $13.92 per hour, the Care Index found, but typically have no benefits like health care, advocates said, and are often expected to take on more chores without additional pay, and have no recourse if they鈥檙e fired.
Georgia is also using the federal funds to increase the availability of quality infant and toddler care in rural counties, called Early Education Empowerment Zones, where the need for licensed, quality infant and toddler care far outstrips what鈥檚 currently available. In Clark County, home of the University of Georgia, the current system can only serve 27 percent of the children ages 0-4 who may need care. In Brooks County, it鈥檚 less than 5 percent.
In addition, the state is also revamping its child care subsidy program with an eye to increasing quality for disadvantaged children in an effort to boost school readiness, close the achievement gap, and reduce inequality. In a plan approved in May 2016, the state is lowering the amount low-income working families have to pay out of pocket, a move that will mean strapped Georgia families will no longer . Georgia is also raising the rate it reimburses high quality centers for accepting children who qualify for subsidies鈥攗p to the 75th percentile of the 2013 market rate for care. (Although the cost of early care and learning nationally has risen every year鈥斺攖he state had been setting reimbursement rates based on a fraction of what early care and learning cost in 2007.) Advocates say that will mean high quality centers will be more likely to accept more children from economically disadvantaged backgrounds. And that鈥檚 a good thing.
But the bad thing is that the increased spending on quality and affordability means, without additional substantial investment, the state will be cutting availability to as many as 17,000 children a year. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like, in a flu epidemic when you have limited vaccines. Do you give watered-down flu vaccines to the whole population, where it may not do the trick, or do you give the recommended dosage to a smaller number of people?鈥 said Mindy Binderman, an advocate with Georgia Early Education Alliance for Ready Students. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a really hard trade-off.鈥
And with so far to go, so much at stake in the early years, and the federal grant expiring soon, parents, advocates, and providers worry that lawmakers in the fiscally and culturally conservative state will fail to act. Outside the roughly $300 million in state lottery funds for pre-K every year, Georgia invests about $50 million annually鈥攖o match the federal government鈥檚 $200 million鈥攖o help make early care and learning more affordable for about 50,000 children from low-income working families, even though that represents of the nearly 700,000 children under age 13 living in such families. (Unlike 12 other states, Georgia does not add state dollars to the federal Head Start preschool program.) Many lawmakers see early care and learning as the private responsibility of families, advocates said, not a public good to invest in. 鈥淗onestly, many legislators come from a different era in which mama stayed home with their babies, so they think that is where they belong,鈥 said Carolyn Salvador, executive director of the Georgia Child Care Association. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to overcome old ideas that this is not early education, but just glorified babysitting.鈥
From his office window on the 38th floor in the soaring One Atlantic Center skyscraper in Midtown Atlanta, Aaron Block, a corporate lawyer for the international law firm Alston & Bird, can see his three-year-old daughter Mary Jane鈥檚 child development center. The law firm is one of the few employers in the country that offers subsidized, high quality on-site early care and learning to its employees鈥攋ust two blocks away. And unlike in most centers, where turnover is high and quality low, many of the well-trained and well-paid teachers have worked at the bright, airy Children鈥檚 Campus since it opened in 2001. 鈥淭here鈥檚 this feeling of community that you get from being at a child care center that鈥檚 associated with the firm,鈥 Block said. In fact, on-site care was a big draw when he decided to accept the job in 2010, even though that was before he and his now-wife were even married.
The same was true for reference librarian Toral Doshi, whose son Kieran is in Mary Jane鈥檚 class. 鈥淚鈥檝e never had a moment鈥檚 hesitation about leaving my son at the center,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd a lot of it has to do with the fact that the teachers, they do become your family鈥omeone that you know and trust and that your son loves and that they love him.鈥
Aaron Block drops Mary Jane off in the morning at the campus, which is operated by Bright Horizons, the largest provider of employer-sponsored early care and learning in the country. He can pop over for her dance recitals a few hours later, or sign up to read to her class. 鈥淒uring the day, I can be more productive and focused at work because I know that she鈥檚 in a place where she鈥檚 safe, where she鈥檚 happy,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen I鈥檝e had a tough or demanding day, it really helps to look out the window and be able to see my daughter鈥檚 child care center, and know that she鈥檚 there having a fun time. Because ultimately that鈥檚 why I鈥檓 working hard.鈥
To build a robust early care and learning infrastructure, where all children develop strong attachments to well-trained teachers and are exposed to rich language nutrition to build the brain architecture for future learning, health and development, where parents can easily find affordable, high-quality care, and well-trained teachers and providers can make living wages, economists like Stanford University鈥檚 Myra Strober argue that it will take not just parents, but business and government support. Nationally, parents shoulder about 60 percent of the cost of early care and learning, one study found, federal, state, and local governments 39 percent, and businesses and philanthropic organizations just one percent.
鈥淭he economics for child care are the same as for K-12 education: There is no education that isn鈥檛 subsidized. Public education is fully subsidized by the government, and private education is subsidized by private gifts from alumni and the tax system,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut the way child care is setup now, the market just doesn鈥檛 work. Parent tuition alone simply cannot cover the cost of services.鈥
When it comes to business support for early care and learning, about 61 percent offer employees Dependent Care Assistance Plans to help them pay for care with up to $5,000 pre-tax dollars a year, according to the 2014 National Study of the Employer. Which is a drop in the bucket compared what parents typically pay. The Care Index found that the average full-time cost for center and family home care for children aged 0-4 ranged from a low of $5,720 a year in Arkansas to a high of about $15,856 in Washington, D.C. In Georgia, costs run about $8,569 a year. (Average full-time nanny care costs between $26,000 and $33,000 a year.) Only 2 percent of companies actually provide employees with vouchers or subsidies that are a direct cost to the company. And only 7 percent offer on-site, or near-site child development centers, down from 9 percent in 2008.
But in Georgia, Alston & Bird is only one of a number of larger employers offering on-site care and learning. Home Depot, Aflac, Turner Broadcasting System, Wellstar, Georgia Power, Georgia Pacific, and others do as well. One big reason is that Georgia is one of a handful of states that have passed tax incentives to help defray the cost of building and running on-site centers. Alston & Bird was able to write off 100 percent of the $4 million cost of building the center over 10 years, explained Hillary Bowers, senior benefits coordinator for the firm, and they can write off 75 percent of the annual operating cost.
鈥淭he cost of child care is something that the firm recognizes can be a huge burden on families, not just in Atlanta, but nationwide,鈥 she said. The firm subsidizes the cost of care for the 70 children in the center, so parents pay below market rates, and offers scholarships for certain employee families who need additional help covering the cost of care. Now, in addition to expanded paid parental leave, breastfeeding rooms, and other family-friendly benefits, Bowers said the firm sees the Children鈥檚 Campus as an important tool for recruiting and retaining good workers and creating a positive company culture. 鈥淥ur philosophy at Alston & Bird is that if we take care of our people, they will take care of our business. That is just the simplest business case there is.鈥
At the end of a long day of work at a small sports marketing firm, a very pregnant Micki Velmer is driving to pick up her three-year-old son, Burke, from the Frazer Center, a child development center, when her car overheats and breaks down. Although Velmer鈥檚 husband, Jason, who works in digital marketing, soon swings by to get her and then get both of them to the Frazer Center before it closes, Velmer is uneasy.
Finding quality early care and learning that they could afford for Burke was difficult enough. She and Jason began looking when she was barely pregnant with Burke, toured child development centers, put down several deposits, and made regular phone calls to check in for months, 鈥渓ike it was another part-time job,鈥 she says. But by the time Burke was born and she had cobbled together 12 weeks of short-term disability, vacation, and unpaid time off鈥攕he had no paid family leave鈥攏othing had opened up. There were a few informal 鈥淢om鈥檚 Morning Out鈥 programs, but they only lasted a few hours. In a panic, the couple began to share a nanny with neighbors. But when both families moved to safer neighborhoods with better public schools, Velmer snapped up a part-time spot for Burke at the Frazer Center. He was nearly one year old. Now that he attends full time, they pay about $1,375 a month for his care, plus fees. With the new baby on the way, they鈥檒l soon be paying another $1,450 a month. (Some centers in Atlanta that they looked at but ruled out as too expensive charge as much as $1,800 a month for infant care.) The cost of two children in full-time care will be more than the mortgage on their tidy ranch house in Druid Hills, one of the more affluent neighborhoods in Atlanta. Now, she worries, is not the time for expensive car repairs.
Because infant slots are so hard to find鈥攊n Atlanta, in Georgia, in the United States鈥攖he Velmers鈥 baby will be enrolled and they will actually start paying tuition a few days before the baby is even born. And they鈥檒l continue to pay throughout Velmer鈥檚 12-week parental leave. This time, working for a new company, she gets two weeks of paid parental leave, which she鈥檒l extend with other paid and unpaid time off, and short term disability. Jason, who works for a French company, will have four weeks paid parental leave. All the while, they鈥檒l be paying $4,350, plus deposit, just to reserve their baby鈥檚 spot.
Velmer has her concerns about the Frazer Center. She loves the diverse and inclusive special needs community; how the center is tucked into the woods with walking paths and gardens; and that it鈥檚 only one mile from their house. But, every year, the teacher turnover has been high. Not one of Burke鈥檚 teachers has made it through an entire school year, which she worries has disrupted the continuity of care, so critical for a child鈥檚 healthy development, despite the high price tag. But, just like Monyatta Carter waiting for her daughter to turn four and the financial relief of Georgia鈥檚 universal pre-K program, Velmer hangs on at the Frazer Center because, if Burke stays, he鈥檒l be guaranteed a free pre-K spot. Then she鈥檒l only need to pay about $75 a week for after school care. If they remove him, they can enter the lottery and take a chance that he鈥檒l get one of the universal pre-K slots at a nearby public school or another private or nonprofit center. But that鈥檚 no guarantee. The competition in Druid Hills for the limited pre-K slots is fierce. 鈥淚t just seems like a big gamble,鈥 she says.
鈥淐hild care is tough,鈥 Velmer said. Even for those, like she and Jason, with good jobs and savings. 鈥淚 honestly don鈥檛 know how some people do it.鈥 She does know that costs like early care and learning 聽are a big reason that, after their second child is born, she and Jason will never likely have more. 鈥淲e鈥檇 always said we鈥檇 have two or three, but the financial piece is so scary.鈥
Velmer slowly walks into Burke鈥檚 classroom at the Frazer Center, where the children sit in a circle on a colorful carpet listening to one of the new teachers read a story, while Jason stays in the car and calls a mechanic and tow truck. The little boy鈥檚 eyes light up when he sees his mother, and he rushes to crush himself against her huge belly.
鈥淗ey Bud,鈥 she says softly, brushing the soft blonde hair from his forehead. 鈥淗ave a good day?鈥
鈥淵eah,鈥 Burke says, not letting go.
鈥淵ou ready to go home?鈥
The boy nods. They walk toward the car, hand in hand.
The front door of Nora Nivia Nevarez鈥檚 adobe-like house in suburban Albuquerque opens to blocks and children鈥檚 books scattered around the brightly colored carpet, shaped like a puzzle piece. Children鈥檚 shouts can be heard in the backyard, as the children play on a slide during recess. Throughout the afternoon, she keeps a careful eye on her four small charges, ages four months to 10 years, by turns reading books, playing blocks, and helping them with puzzles. She periodically gets up to stir a pot of chicken noodle soup she鈥檚 preparing for the kids鈥 dinner, one of any number of meals and snacks she鈥檒l make for the children she cares for every day. Nevarez works no set hours, but rather follows parents鈥 work schedules. That can mean days that start as early as 6 a.m. and last long into the evening. One little boy named Javier cries as his guardian, Guadalupe, picks him up. He鈥檚 tired, and ready to go home.
鈥淚 love caring for children, I just wish it were a little bit easier,鈥 she sighs, speaking in Spanish. Nevarez, 50, has been taking care of children for decades. She began with her own three children, cared for her two grandchildren and now helps friends and neighbors as a registered family child care provider in Southwest Albuquerque, one of the many in the state. And truly, her work is a labor of love. She doesn鈥檛 turn anyone away. Javier is autistic and his guardian hasn鈥檛 been able to find anyone who will care for the child. Nevarez will.
Due to state regulations, Nevarez cares for no more than four children unrelated to her at any given point. She charges $2.00 per hour per child in her community, regardless of what families make, to help keep the cost affordable. That means, at best, she鈥檒l earn $8.00 an hour to care for four children. But if she takes toddlers from low-income families receiving a state subsidy to help them pay for care, she may make as little as $1.58 per hour per child. That鈥檚 $6.32 per hour for four kids. Reimbursement rates for infants are slightly higher. But even with such paltry pay, she often doesn鈥檛 know from week to week how much she鈥檒l earn, because the parents鈥 schedules are often erratic and sometimes the children need care for part of the week, and sometimes for all of it, and sometimes, to cover family overtime, even more.
But that Nevarez makes so little does not mean that families aren鈥檛 paying a lot. Parents are expected to pay the difference between the state鈥檚 full rate鈥攂ased on child age, hours of care needed, and status of child care provider鈥攁nd what the state chooses to subsidize based on parent income. And in Albuquerque, despite the long hours and low pay for Nevarez, her family child care home is actually a best-case scenario, if not for her, then for families. Like other registered providers, her family home meets basic health and safety standards. She knows CPR. She knows that infants should be put to sleep on their backs. And she鈥檚 gotten more training on developmentally appropriate activities and other measures of high quality care, so that she can become a licensed provider. That鈥檚 good for the families of her four charges. But many other families have far fewer options. And in a state where child poverty rates are the highest in the country and many working families struggle to make ends meet, many can鈥檛 find registered or licensed child care they can afford, so they move underground, into the 鈥済ray market鈥 of often unreliable, unregulated family, friend and neighbor care.
In gathering information on the cost, quality and availability of care, New Mexico, falling in the lowest quartile in the Care Index, stands out as a state struggling to provide affordable and accessible care鈥攕eeking to improve quality鈥攁nd forced to make trade-offs because of the way the current system is set up. The Care Index found that the average cost of care in a center in New Mexico, $8,865 a year, is about 95 percent of the average rent, nearly 20 percent of the median household income, and would eat up more than half of a minimum wage worker鈥檚 income. 麻豆果冻传媒 one quarter of all centers are accredited for quality.
New Mexico also mirrors many of the changing demographic trends of young learners: increasing numbers of dual-language learners who speak a language other than English at home. So why is it so difficult for families in New Mexico to find quality, much less affordable care?
Child care is expensive. Children under five require individualized care, attention, and learning, and 80 percent of the cost of child care are the teachers鈥 salaries. To reduce the cost of care to a lower鈥攂ut still unreasonable鈥攍evel, most caregivers in New Mexico, and across the country, are paid poverty wages. This is reinforced by the state, which reimburses caregivers like Nevarez at a fraction of the cost of providing care. As a result, in 2015 nearly half (46 percent) of the child care workforce across the country relied on public assistance. In their most of the early childhood workforce, University of California Berkeley researchers Marcy Whitebook, Caitlin McLean, and Leah J.E. Austin found that, in New Mexico, child care workers are in the third income-percentile鈥攏early the lowest of all paid workers鈥攁nd get few to no benefits. The median hourly wage is $9.10, a four percent decrease since 2010. Inadequate pay results in high attrition and turnover. Places that do provide adequate pay, and have low turnover rates have to rely on outside donations, in addition to private tuition paid by parents, and government funds, to survive.
Catholic Charities is one of those providers. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 fully address child development without losing money due to the cost of quality staffing, staff development, and safe facilities,鈥 said James Gannon, CEO and executive director of Catholic Charities in the Archdiocese of New Mexico. 鈥淐atholic Charities assesses community need, provides services, and covers the shortfall later. It鈥檚 not economically sustainable.鈥
In their South Valley child development center, Catholic Charities provides services to 47 children, running an annual deficit of roughly $250,000. The reason? They invest in the teachers in order to provide high quality care. 鈥淲e pay our staff $13.00 per hour, provide health care, time-off, and a retirement plan,鈥 Gannon explained. 聽
Child care is a double-edged sword. Because the majority of children are raised by working parents, not accessing child care is not an option. To those who are unemployed, a lack of child care creates a barrier to reducing poverty, family income, and a steady job.
Yet even after attempting to provide 鈥渓ow-cost鈥 care to families, the cost is still too high relative to income. In the case of New Mexico, families have limited means to contribute to expenses such as child care鈥30 percent of children live in poverty, the highest rate in the U.S., and 56 percent of children receive public health insurance in the form of Medicaid and the Children鈥檚 Health Insurance Program (CHIP). As recently as August 2016, New Mexico Cabinet Secretary Monique Jacobson estimated that child-Medicaid eligibility was as high as 80 percent. Child care is a double-edged sword. Because the majority of children are raised by working parents, not accessing child care is not an option. To those who are unemployed, a lack of child care creates a barrier to reducing poverty, family income, and a steady job.
In New Mexico, availability of child care is also related to the cost issue: Demand for formal care dwindles because families can鈥檛 pay for it, and child care workers leave the industry because they can鈥檛 make enough money. Finally, the inability to retain workers makes quality difficult to achieve鈥攖he industry can鈥檛 retain the workers they do successfully train.
All this is to say that the high cost of care often pushes people to rely on informal family, friend, and neighbor networks and family child care providers like the still-underpaid Nevarez. But since people are opting out of any formal system, we know increasingly little about the safety and quality of children in such settings. Is the care loving, warm, and developmentally appropriate? Or are kids are just plopped in front of a television set? There鈥檚 no way to know.
Amy Bazan had her first child鈥攁 daughter, Alexandria鈥攚hen she was 19 years old. She faced the daunting task of finding child care while tackling a pre-med course load. In her first week of care, Alexandria fell off a concrete step and hit her face. Bazan remembers:
Children fall all the time. What was scary is that they didn鈥檛 call to let me know what happened and didn鈥檛 give my daughter first aid for the gash. At pick up, I saw my daughter鈥檚 bloody face and the caregiver didn't have any information about what had happened.
She took her out of that center and found another. At the second center, her daughter鈥檚 pinky finger got smashed and nearly pinched off. Alexandria would scream and cry when she dropped her off, so Bazan gave up on the second center as well. She eventually found New Mexico鈥檚 child care resource and referral line and a family child care provider she felt comfortable with. When her caregiver went back to school, the caregiver suggested Bazan take over the 聽business and open a family child care program herself so as to both earn money and meet her own care needs for Alexandria.
After running her own family home program for three years and working across the child care system, in 2014 Bazan was named director of the Providers Allied for Nutrition program鈥 a USDA (CACFP) program. Nicknamed PAN after the Spanish word for bread, the YWCA program provides family child care providers, including Nevarez, with money and information about safe cooking, healthy eating, and community resources. Over the last 15 years, Bazan has watched the type and number of providers dwindle. Under the current system, attempting to provide high quality care that鈥檚 affordable and easily available for parents is a lose-lose situation, Bazan said. From the other end of the proverbial telescope, she joins Nevarez in wishing it were just a little bit easier.
Family child care homes are mostly unregulated鈥攖echnically 鈥渓egally exempt鈥 from New Mexico health and safety regulations鈥攅xcept for when providers register and participate in subsidy programs, the largest of which is CACFP. This means that, to really understand family home care, you need to understand federal food and nutrition programs.
What little information we have is limited to registered and licensed family child care homes. The licensing and registration unit of the New Mexico Children Youth and Families Department inspects licensed family child care homes a minimum of twice per year, registered family child care homes annually, and food sponsors visit two to four times per year. Nevarez is one of those registered鈥攁nd inspected鈥擭ew Mexico providers participating in the food program. If providers are not in compliance with licensing standards, providers will receive additional inspections until they are found 鈥渋n compliance鈥 or given a sanction. Alternatively, providers may reduce the number of children in their care, opt out of registration or licensure, or receive a fine, thereby losing state food or assistance subsidies. Cease and desist notices are issued to stop all daycare when a provider is found to be caring for more than four non-residential children. But according to Henry Varela, communications director for the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department, non-compliance numbers are not tracked. Moreover: 鈥淲e are unable to prevent a provider who did not meet the qualifications to become licensed or registered from babysitting up to four non-residential children. It is through educating parents on how to select quality child care that we encourage them to select registered or licensed providers to care for their children,鈥 said Varela.
In the 1960s, increasing numbers of people were watching kids not their own, and having to feed them across the day. In 1968, the U.S. Department of Agriculture recognized the need to support caregivers and working families, and thus sponsored a pilot program to reimburse caregivers for the meals served while caring for the children, and provide nutritional information and education. Section 17 of the 1976 National School Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. 1766) made the program permanent and today, CACFP funds meals for in child care across the country as well as technical assistance for quality day care and nutrition improvements.
The program is funded by the USDA and administered by states. The New Mexico food program is run through the family nutrition bureau of the New Mexico Child, Youth and Families Department (CYFD). CYFD contracts community providers鈥攏onprofits鈥攖o visit family child care providers, which is how the YWCA got involved. In New Mexico, there are 15 nonprofit , including the YWCA, that work with child care providers in their home. Nutrition programs are therefore a main vein of the caregiving landscape, touching a wide swath of care providers.
When Bazan started with PAN in 1994, the food program helped close to 1,200 registered family child care home providers out of 7,000 statewide. Now they help roughly 250 out of 2,000 statewide. The number of licensed providers is a small fraction of the number of registered providers, which is a fraction of the number of unregulated gray market providers as a whole.
鈥淚n the last two years alone,鈥 Bazan said, 鈥淚鈥檝e watched the food program lose 30 percent of homes and go into rapid decline.鈥 Loren Miller, CACFP manager for the (statewide) Family Nutrition Bureau of the Children, Youth and Families Department (NM), confirmed that between November 2013 and July 2016 alone, the state witnessed a decline from 3,117 to 2,151 providers. In Bazan鈥檚 experience, people are still providing care and simply forgoing government programs and regulations, be it the food program, registration, and/or licensing, because complying is too costly, time-consuming, and invasive. As a result, the number of children needing care in New Mexico outpaces the number of known child care slots.
That doesn鈥檛 mean the children aren鈥檛 ending up somewhere.
Family, friend and neighbor care, as well as family child care homes like Nevarez鈥, offer particular strengths and challenges. In New Mexico, people are legally exempt from health and safety child care laws if they care for four or fewer children unrelated to them. Since most family, friend and neighbor care and family child care centers are small and unregulated, there are no consequences to providing unsafe or low-quality care. Often, no one knows about the overcrowded or unsafe under-the-table care arrangement unless . And even for regulated care, there is no one body 鈥渆nforcing鈥 safe or developmental standards. States have varying health and safety standards and spotty inspection cycles. The federal government only recently added health, safety and quality standards for all providers through the Child Care and Development Block Grant, but they apply only to child care centers and family child care homes that accept children on subsidies. All of which is to say, we know little about the health and safety of many family child care homes, family, friend and neighbor care, and even less about the content of what children are learning.
Which brings us back to Bazan and Nevarez. When Bazan became a child care provider, her experience with the food program and associated technical assistance was very supportive and helpful: 鈥淭hey made following the rules easy,鈥 she said. They helped her comply with child care regulations and supplement her knowledge with free nutrition and child development training. Bazan was a registered provider with the PAN food program until her daughter turned five. When her daughter entered school and her child care needs changed, Bazan鈥檚 food program monitor asked if she’d be interested in a position as a field representative of the program. Bazan registered and monitored family home providers for eight years, and then worked as a child care professional development specialist on quality improvement in accordance with New Mexico鈥檚 quality rating system. Bazan worked her way up to a management position as she received her Master鈥檚 in education (2012) at the University of New Mexico. Having gained years of experience across the child care spectrum, she returned to PAN as the new director in 2014. Between 1994 and today, she鈥檚 watched the hurdles of finding and receiving quality child care increase.
Nevarez, meanwhile, was the primary caregiver for her children and grandchildren. But as her children aged out of care, she began to care for other children in her neighborhood and community. I connected with Nevarez through the (PCA), which helped her pursue an early childhood certificate from the Central New Mexico Community College and become a registered provider with the food program. Founded in 1990, PCA works to develop the capacity of parents to be advocates for early education, develop relationships with their service providers, and help them become strong leaders at the local and state level. Yet despite her desire to provide enriching care for her students, and become not just registered, but licensed, which will enable her to care for more children and receive a higher subsidy rate per child, she鈥檚 facing the perfect storm of bureaucratic changes.
鈥淚t used to be that the food program operated as a one-stop shop for ensuring food, health, and safety of children in family child care homes, as well as registering providers and offering information on child development,鈥 said Bazan. However, this all changed in October of 2013, when the USDA imposed a new requirement which stipulated that home sponsoring organizations were not allowed to complete the registration process and give approval to operate as registered homes. The memo requires sponsoring agencies鈥攕uch as the YWCA鈥攖o focus solely on what’s being served and food sanitation, not health and safety or child development: 鈥淪tate agencies may not require CACFP sponsors to monitor a facility鈥檚 compliance with State or local licensing requirements or report licensing violations to the State licensing agency.鈥 Shortly thereafter, the government of New Mexico created a separate department to monitor the food program. New Mexico food monitors鈥攊ncluding Miller and Bazan鈥攁ttribute changes in monitoring to this rule. Now nonprofits such as the YWCA monitor the food program, and a second, different department housed in CYFD manages the registration and licensing process, which has become labyrinthine.
Today, family child care home providers like Nevarez must deftly navigate the following steps to become registered. The family provider must:
Meanwhile, everyone over 18 in the provider鈥檚 household has to pass the background check or the provider will not be eligible for registration or licensing. This is especially sensitive for families that are or know undocumented persons, and/or families with members who were formerly incarcerated. In the case of a failed home inspection, CYFD issues a survey report of what needs to get corrected in order to proceed with the registration or licensure process within 30 days. If approved, a clearance letter is offered and providers must call CYFD to schedule a home visit ($15). Throughout this process, family child care centers are subject to random visits.
Registered and licensed family child care providers are now becoming the exception. Most are not participating in the food program, or getting registered or licensed to provide care.
It is costly, time-consuming, and nearly impossible to comply鈥攅specially if providers must personally run these errands during child care hours and if they don鈥檛 speak English. Registered and licensed family child care providers are now becoming the exception. Most are not participating in the food program, or getting registered or licensed to provide care.
Which puts New Mexico back in the gray zone.
After months of paperwork, Nevarez finally received her provisional child care license and can now care for six children at a time. If she passes her final inspection, her new license for a two-star, licensed family child care home will be issued for a full year. Licensed providers are paid $2.67 per hour for toddlers receiving subsidy, or $16.02 for six children鈥攁 meaningful raise from the rate for registered providers.
It鈥檚 the end of the day, and Nevarez begins to help the children gather their artwork and pack their small backpacks. She reflects on how much she鈥檚 learned as she鈥檚 sought to improve the quality of the care she provides and obtain a license, and how important that鈥檚 been for the children, despite the bureaucratic nightmare.
鈥淚 wish I had known more about child learning when I raised my children and grandchildren. I know so much more now,鈥 she said. Research has found that children who speak a language other than English at home, like Nevarez鈥 charges, particularly benefit from high quality early care and learning; it promotes their , , and . Bazan echos that sentiment, having just helped a friend look for child care: 鈥淚鈥檓 now more knowledgeable and picky. Finding child care for her [Bazan鈥檚 friend] was such a challenge. She鈥檚 found a home provider and paying $1,000, which is about her mortgage payment.鈥 聽
That鈥檚 a steep price. As Bazan and Nevarez both know, however, in New Mexico, providing care doesn鈥檛 come cheap for caregivers or the families who turn to them. Nevarez fastens the straps on Javier鈥檚 backpack as the children begin to leave at the end of the day with their parents. She stands in the doorway and waves goodbye.
Correction 11/22/2016: Nora Nevarez graduated from Central New Mexico Community College, not the University of New Mexico, as previously stated.
鈥淢oney has been a constant struggle,鈥 says Kim Silva of her 30 years as an early education teacher in Massachusetts. 鈥淥ne unexpected expense can put you in the hole for months.鈥
Silva, 46, is the lead teacher in a preschool classroom at NorthStar, a child care center in New Bedford. NorthStar largely serves children whose parents鈥 income is low enough that they are eligible to receive financial subsidies from the state to help pay for care. Silva has worked there since she was 15, moving from aide to teacher to lead teacher. Yet after more than three decades, she makes only $11.91 an hour. That鈥檚 $25,000 a year.
Silva speaks with an unqualified passion for the work she does. But she is also a single mother who has scraped and scrambled to support herself and raise her daughter, now 21, on an early educator鈥檚 salary. Like the majority of early childhood educators, Silva exists on near-poverty wages, on par with fast food cooks and bartenders, making less than bellhops, janitors, and parking attendants. The Department of Labor still groups most child care workers with personal service providers such as valets, butlers and fitness trainers 聽rather than other education-related occupations.
The Department of Labor still groups most child care workers with personal service providers such as valets, butlers and fitness trainers 聽rather than other education-related occupations.
Silva pays $841 a month to live in a low-income housing development in New Bedford. 鈥淚t is not a good area,鈥 she says. When her daughter was growing up, 鈥渢here were gunshots. There were drugs. I had to make sure my daughter was always involved in something to keep her busy and safe.鈥
Her daughter attended NorthStar, where Silva paid on a sliding scale. But even that sometimes proved too much. There were times when finances were so lean that she and her daughter had to move in with her mother. 鈥淭here were months of cable on, cable off, electric on, electric off,鈥 she recalls, her eyes 聽swelling with tears. 鈥淚t got to a point where I had to choose between rent or sending my daughter to daycare. So we left our home so she could get an education.鈥
Silva has always been on food stamps. Most recently she was receiving $33 a month in food benefits, which dropped to $16 a month when she got a raise after earning her bachelor鈥檚 degree. That鈥檚 enough to cover milk, cereal, and bread. 麻豆果冻传媒 one-third of Silva鈥檚 paycheck goes towards health insurance, which, for many years, was a necessity to cover her daughter鈥檚 ADHD medication.
鈥楧on鈥檛 tell me we don鈥檛 subsidize child care in the United States,鈥 said Mary Brown, who has spent 30 years as a child care center director and child care consultant. 鈥榃e do. It鈥檚 the teachers, mostly women, who鈥檝e been subsidizing child care all along.鈥
To afford even basics like food and clothing, rent and utilities, Silva has needed to take on additional jobs on the weekends. She works as a personal care assistant鈥攃ooking, cleaning, doing laundry, and running errands鈥攑ositions that, at $13.68 an hour, pay more than her job as a lead teacher.
Silva鈥檚 experience in Massachusetts reflects that of an . The median hourly wage for child care workers is $9.77 an hour, which places them in only the second percentile of wage earners when all professions are ranked, making it one of the lowest paid professions in the country. Close to one-half (46 percent) of child care workers, compared to about one-quarter (26 percent) of the total U.S. workforce, are on public assistance. Low wages can lead to high teacher burnout, high levels of teacher stress, and high teacher turnover鈥攖he national turnover rate for child care workers is 13 percent, significantly higher than the . All of this compromises the consistency of care parents require and the quality of care children need.
鈥淒on鈥檛 tell me we don鈥檛 subsidize child care in the United States,鈥 said Mary Brown, who has spent 30 years as a child care center director and child care consultant. 鈥淲e do. It鈥檚 the teachers, mostly women, who鈥檝e been subsidizing child care all along.鈥
Despite the very real struggles of Silva and child care workers like her in the state, Massachusetts actually ranked in the top quartile of states in the Care Index. Massachusetts measures near the top in quality and availability in comparison to other states. Though quality is difficult to measure, 38 percent of centers and family homes are nationally accredited for quality, one of the higher rates in the country. And indeed, Massachusetts has made positive moves towards improving its early care and education system. It was one of the first states to form a dedicated (EEC) so child care could be monitored and funded as an aspect of education. They have had a Quality Rating and Improvement System in place since 2011, setting guidelines for what the state believes comprises high quality child care.
However, The Care Index found that the cost of child care in the state is extremely high, averaging $13,208 a year in child care establishments, nearly equal to the average cost of rent in the state, even as the caregivers still earn poverty wages. The cost for infants is even higher鈥$16,682 a year, more than a quarter of the state鈥檚 median household income, and nearly 90 percent of a minimum wage workers鈥 earnings. This high cost presents serious challenges to parents struggling to pay for care, and to providers, who often operate on paper-thin margins to survive.
That it may have one of the most successful early care and learning systems in the country says more about what鈥檚 lacking in the rest of the country than what鈥檚 thriving in Massachusetts, a state with a still-struggling system. It is indicative of the nationwide state of child care that neither the providers nor the parents nor the teachers feel it works well for anyone.
That it may have one of the most successful early care and learning systems in the country says more about what鈥檚 lacking in the rest of the country than what鈥檚 thriving in Massachusetts, a state with a still-struggling system.
It certainly doesn鈥檛 work well financially for those like Kim Silva, who has spent her entire adult life learning to want less and compromise more. She acknowledges that on some days it is difficult to leave her financial stress at the door and fully engage with the classroom, and that she has to dig deep inside herself to find a way. But despite all the hardship and financial sacrifice, Silva can鈥檛 imagine doing any other kind of work. She loves her job and her bonus, she says, comes from the children she teaches.
鈥淚 remind myself that I am so lucky to go to a job every day, knowing I am doing the most important work there is.鈥
In 2015, the median wage for child care workers in Massachusetts was $12.01/hr. Thirty-nine percent of the state鈥檚 child care workers are on public assistance. In addition, the state reimbursement rate to providers who accept children qualifying for subsidies remains than the 75th percentile recommended by the federal government. These rates have a huge impact on what local providers who take any subsidized children can pay their teachers and on the quality of education they are thus able to provide.
Statistics like these have made it more and more difficult to draw teachers into the field and get them to stick around. 鈥淲hen the state pays deflated rates, it basically forces programs to balance the books on the backs of their employees,鈥 said William J. Eddy, executive director of the Massachusetts Association of Early Education and Care.
In Massachusetts, near-poverty-level pay combined with the state鈥檚 low unemployment rate has created a severe shortage of qualified teachers. Silva is the model of dedication to her profession, but she herself acknowledges that it is untenable to demand of the next generation of teachers or the next generation of parents what was demanded of her. 鈥淲e are definitely in a crisis situation here. If not for me, then for them,鈥 she said. 鈥淪omething has to change.鈥
Silva鈥檚 observation echoes the feelings of many educators, advocates, and providers in the state, all of whom recognize that without qualified teachers there is no early education system at all. In recent years in Massachusetts, much of the energy around reforming child care has focused on creating better conditions for this struggling workforce.
One of the most powerful voices for early care and learning teachers has been that of Marie St. Fleur, a Haitian-American with deep personal and professional ties to early education. St. Fleur began her career in the Massachusetts Attorney General鈥檚 office working on welfare reform, and as a criminal prosecutor, where she encountered firsthand what can happen to children who are denied basic needs like a stable home life and a decent education, beginning with early care.
As she became enmeshed in raising her own children and navigating a career that took her to the state legislature, where she served as the vice-chair of the Ways and Means committee, St. Fleur鈥檚 commitment to affordable, high-quality early education grew.
鈥淚 came to understand the challenges to the generation of women who are supposed to somehow do it all with no infrastructure there,鈥 she explains. 鈥 It鈥檚 shameful, but society still has not figured out how to deal with this issue.鈥
In 2014, St. Fleur, now the president and CEO of the Bessie Tartt Wilson Initiative for Children, became the driving force behind the Put Massachusetts Kids First Coalition. The coalition is a group of over 70鈥攁nd growing鈥攐rganizations from across the state that came together with the hope of strengthening and stabilizing the early education workforce.
鈥淲e had to make the legislature understand that they cannot simply ignore the workforce who are building our next generation,鈥 says St. Fleur.
The coalition began advocating for a rate reserve (an increase in the rate paid by the state) for programs receiving public funds, with the understanding that this reserve would be used to increase teacher pay. They were not pushing for radical transformation of the child care economy, though St. Fleur admits that is what is needed to truly mend what is broken. Teachers in facilities that do not accept children who receive subsidies would not be impacted at all by a rate reserve. But St. Fleur knew it was a crucial start that could stabilize the workforce and potentially free up resources for future, more expansive change.
The coalition also realized that the time had come not only to advocate for, but to engage and empower the workforce. Teachers began organizing, writing and calling legislators and, in December 2015, a group of them came to an Early Education and Care board meeting in Boston to testify about the details of their financial lives. Some, like Kim Silva, had been seeking these changes for 20 years. Others had just arrived in 聽the field and were already weighing whether they could afford to stay.
鈥榃e need a better model, one that is going to work for all the children in every community.鈥
Although the Coalition initially asked for an investment of $40 million, the state allotted only about a quarter of that, $12.5 million, in the 2017 budget. For Marie St. Fleur, the hope is that this partial success story can serve as a critical wake-up call regarding the crippled state of the entire child care economy.
鈥淲e need a better model, one that is going to work for all the children in every community,鈥 reflects St. Fleur. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big conversation but I think we are ready to have it. There鈥檚 momentum now. We need to seize it. If we blink, who knows when we’ll have another chance.鈥
The teachers in Massachusetts are not the only ones feeling the pressures from lack of funding. Child care centers that accept even a portion of children who receive government subsidies have been forced to shut down classrooms, reduce staff, and strip benefits from workers just to keep their doors open.
鈥淭hings are the most financially precarious anyone can ever remember,鈥 says Wayne Ysaguirre, president and CEO of Nurtury Boston, a child care center serving 1,200 children, 98 percent of whom are subsidized by the state. 鈥淎nd if an organization our size is feeling this, imagine the pressure on the smaller ones just to stay open.鈥
For larger centers like Nurtury, which form the backbone of the state鈥檚 subsidized care system, remaining financially viable has required remarkable ingenuity鈥攃ombining state and federal resources, nonprofit grants, and often extensive fundraising. No center wants to close classrooms or underpay teachers.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a crisis situation,鈥 confirms Ysaguirre. 鈥淭he opportunities for children, for parents, for staff are all shrinking.鈥
Two years ago, Nurtury opened a state-of-the-art center in a public housing facility in Boston. They had seven infant rooms, with families able to pay full tuition lining up for spots. But the center was unable to fill the rooms because they couldn鈥檛 find qualified lead teachers with bachelor鈥檚 degrees.
鈥業t鈥檚 a crisis situation,鈥 confirms Ysaguirre. 鈥楾he opportunities for children, for parents, for staff are all shrinking.鈥
鈥淲e either didn鈥檛 have applicants or those we had couldn鈥檛 work for money offered,鈥 Ysaguirre explains. The salary Nurtury was offering for a lead teacher with a BA ranged from $15.64/hr to $18.66/hr, depending on level of experience, which translates to roughly between $32,000 and $38,000/yr. In contrast, the average yearly salary for a kindergarten teacher in Massachusetts is $67,170/yr.
With labor (i.e. payroll and payroll-related expenses) making up 80 percent of child care costs, early educators bear the brunt of the burden when providers like Nurtury hit financial struggles.
鈥淚 am having to make choices I never want to make,鈥 Ysaguirre admits, his voice choking. He lists the benefits he鈥檚 already stripped from staff, including cutting the portion of health care Nurtury pays, and no longer contributing to teacher retirement funds. He is even considering ending paid lunch breaks and raising 聽the teacher-child ratios. 鈥淚 hate having to put this on the backs of these folks who are already so low paid. These are terrible choices for everyone.鈥
Like Nurtury, Ellis Memorial is a cornerstone of the Boston subsidized child care community. And like Wayne Ysaguirre, CEO Leo Delaney has needed to get creative to keep his organization solvent. Ellis accepts a mix of private pay and subsidized children. To meet their budget, they must raise close to $1 million every year in private money.
Ellis鈥攍ocated in the heart of Boston鈥攈as leaned heavily on the local business community for contributions. Corporate donors help to fund roughly $100,000 in scholarships for lower middle-class families, those hovering just above the eligibility cut-off for government subsidies but unable to afford full-price quality care.
For someone like Emily Hames, Delaney鈥檚 foresight in creating such scholarships has been a godsend. Hames鈥 two daughters have attended Ellis for the past five years. She works as a community social worker and her husband is the payroll manager for a parking company. Both highly value education鈥擧ames has her master鈥檚 degree in social work鈥攁nd are acutely aware of the importance of providing a solid early education. But with a combined income of around $100,000, given the cost of child care and living expenses in the Boston area, that kind of solid start was out of their price range.
鈥淚 spoke to someone involved with Ellis and they told us about the scholarships,鈥 recalls Hames. The scholarship allowed them to send their children to Ellis at 50 percent of the full tuition. Right now, for their pre-K daughter, that means $175/week. 鈥淲e were fortunate. It meant a lot of very difficult questions we didn鈥檛 have to confront.鈥
Hames鈥 $50,000 salary brought in more than the yearly cost of child care, and the family鈥檚 medical and dental benefits are tied to her job. She couldn鈥檛 afford to quit to stay home to become the primary caregiver, nor did she want to.
鈥淚 worked hard for this education and this career. I wasn鈥檛 ready to abandon it. Perhaps, in an ideal world, I would have taken more time off or worked part-time. But once you step out, I know it can be very difficult to step back in again.鈥
At Ellis, she and her husband felt confident their daughters were receiving a quality early education. Hames has high praise for the rigorous curriculum and rich, economically diverse learning environment Ellis provides. 鈥淚t鈥檚 rare that you can find all that, but it鈥檚 what every child deserves.鈥
In the absence of affordable child care, teachers and parents alike end up paying the price.
Despite what is working well for Ellis, like other providers, Leo Delaney is frustrated and at times disheartened by the challenges they are up against.
鈥淩ight now we can鈥檛 find enough qualified teachers to fill available slots. Do I blame them? They can teach at public schools and make $20,000 more. Unless we invest in the teaching workforce, we cannot fill the classrooms. I guess the central problem is pretty simple. Child care is expensive, and nobody can afford to pay for it all.鈥
In the absence of affordable child care, teachers and parents alike end up paying the price.
It would be easy to feel crushed by such pressures鈥攂y lack of teachers and lack of funds and lack of adequate support from the state. But instead, advocates, teachers, and providers are sifting through the rubble for some signs of hope.
They point to the state鈥檚 inclusion in the federal Preschool Expansion Grant (PEG) program. For the past two years, the state has received a small, $15 million federal grant to expand access to high quality preschool programs in five communities across the state. Area public schools collaborate with community providers who have attained a certain quality rating鈥擭urtury and Ellis both participate鈥攖o enhance learning opportunities for four-year-olds in ways that are sustainable and replicable by other communities. Teachers are paid salaries commensurate with public school teachers with support and continuing education built into the program. PEG also mandates extensive evaluation and data-gathering, which will help 聽in recreating similar models elsewhere.
Though the PEG program relies upon a small, temporary grant that targets a small portion of the population鈥攑reschool aged children eligible for subsidies鈥攖here is hope among participants that, if permanently implemented, it might free up resources and create models that could be applied to the 0-3 population as well. PEG differs from many universal pre-K programs in that, instead of being replaced by public school programs, community providers work in tandem with the school system, allowing PEG classrooms to benefit from their often extensive knowledge and experience. It鈥檚 a drop in a large bucket鈥攖he hope is to enroll a total of 3,000 additional four-year-olds across the four-year life of the grant; there are 224,901 children ages 3-5 in Massachusetts who would ideally qualify for preschool education鈥攂ut for those taking part, it represents some refreshingly promising change.
鈥淚 really hope it is the wave of the future,鈥 says Dawn DiStefano, director of Grant Development at Square One, a Springfield community care provider participating in the program. She extols the opportunity to gather data on the benefits of paying teachers public school salaries and providing them professional development opportunities; to collect hard evidence of what can happen when the schools and the community providers communicate and share resources.
鈥淢aybe if we can prove that investment equals quality, we will find a way to make this model permanent.鈥
The federal grant is not indefinite, but the state has signaled its commitment to supporting and replicating the program by dedicating an initial $500,000 for planning expansion grants and then an additional $200,000 for fiscal year 2017.聽
Though teachers, advocates, and providers in Massachusetts find hope in developments like the PEG program, they have not lost sight of the fact that the most difficult and important work still lies ahead. Massachusetts may have some of the highest-quality care available in the country, 聽but it is still part of a broken system. It cannot continue to rely upon patchwork and band-aids鈥攖he sacrifices of those like Kim Silva or the ingenuity of those like Leo Delaney and Wayne Ysaguirre鈥攊n order to survive.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 ask any other part of our education system to function like this,鈥 says Marie St. Fleur, reflecting on the state of child care in Massachusetts and throughout the country. 鈥淲e need to change the way we view and fund early education in a revolutionary way.鈥
Elizabeth Weingarten contributed to this report
Empty buildings are scattered between neighborhoods of post-war era single-family homes in Lyons, Illinois. In a nondescript shopping center, tucked between a laundromat and nail salon, sits Little People Montessori Academy. Only from the large, green strollers parked outside can one tell there might be learning taking place indoors.
Regina LeFlore, the owner and director of the Little People Montessori Academy, has worked in child care for 25 years. One sunny day, her toddlers file out for a field trip to the nearby Riverside Park and Trail. Though a private child care provider, LeFlore believes in offering high-quality education to all. Little People Montessori Academy is a licensed child care center and American Montessori Society member in the process of being rated by Illinois鈥 . Regina is a certified Montessori Teacher working towards a Bachelor鈥檚 Degree in Behavioral Applied Sciences. Care at Little People can range from $1,466 per month for the infants to $990 for the 3-to-5 year-olds.
To be able to open her doors to children of families from all incomes, yet be able to cover the cost of middle and low-income students unable to pay full tuition, LeFlore, like many other providers, uses a 鈥渢hree-legged stool鈥 of braided funding: a combination of state child care subsidy dollars, Illinois pre-K dollars, and federal Head Start dollars. That approach 聽ensures her Montessori-certified teachers are paid a living wage. If receiving support, parents pay the difference between tuition and the braided funding. In recent years, however, LeFlore鈥檚 ability to take on all students has been hampered by a growing and intensifying budget crisis in Illinois. A massive deficit meant that the state had $8 billion dollars in unpaid bills. As a result, the state radically cut the number of students who could qualify for child care subsidies, and state payments for those remaining students were delayed.
The move threw an already struggling child care system into crisis. In the Care Index, Illinois was rated in the third quartile, on the lower end of the scale, for the trade-offs it makes between cost, quality and availability. Child care is expensive. The average cost of care for one child in a family home or center, $10,228 a year, is 94 percent of the state鈥檚 median rent. That care represents 18 percent of the state鈥檚 median household income, and, for a family with a single minimum wage earner, 60 percent. Though quality is difficult to measure, only 21 percent of the state鈥檚 child care establishments are accredited.
Though Illinois was once a national leader in early education, the first to adopt state-funded preschool for three and four-year-olds and the first to mandate bilingual education in public preschool programs, 鈥渨e are no longer at the top of the pack. The money is not there and programs are closing,鈥 said Sara Slaughter, 聽executive director of the, a Chicago-based organization that supports initiatives to improve early childhood education and development. The damage done from the budget crisis is about more than just the money, she added. 鈥淚t chips away at a decade-long policy process to improve children鈥檚 early education and opportunity in life.鈥
At Little People Montessori Academy, when state subsidy funds dried up, LeFlore decided, rather than refuse to teach students from financially struggling backgrounds whose subsidy payments were stopped or delayed, she鈥檇 subsidize the students herself. 鈥淓very day, I pay $160 dollars on a high-interest loan, since poor credit disqualified me from other options,鈥 says LeFlore. She did this because she knew that she is not the only one who looks to the state for help: so do low-income parents across Illinois and the country who badly need someone to care for their children so they can work. LeFlore is putting her own financial stability at risk for the sake of her school and the children there, taking on more private-paying students and the loan to cover delayed payments. She used to offer 50-50 slots: 50 percent of parents paid in-full out-of-pocket, and 50 percent paid through a combination of personal income and support from state and federal funds. Yet now she now has to seek out more tuition-paying parents since the state funding has been so unreliable.
LeFlore is putting her own financial stability at risk for the sake of her school and the children there, taking on more private-paying students and the loan to cover delayed payments.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been tough, but I didn鈥檛 want to kick any students out,鈥 says LeFlore. 鈥淚鈥檝e worked with families in the program to find a way to stay.鈥 Out of necessity, now the ratio is 65 percent private to 35 percent public.
Budget crises aren鈥檛 new to Illinois, which has faced a long-time structural deficit. In other words, for years, the state of Illinois has taken in less money than it spends. As a result, in 2011, lawmakers passed a temporary income tax increase to help the state pay off a backlog of unpaid bills. When the tax increase ended, a budget battle ensued over which programs to cut, and by how much.
Governor Bruce Rauner, a Republican, was elected in 2014 with a mandate to balance the budget, looked to cutting spending on social services like child care subsidies and safety net programs to help struggling families, pitting himself against advocates of social services.
In 2015, the state of Illinois changed child care requirements, dramatically reducing the number of families who could be eligible for subsidies. Eligibility requirements became more stringent; parents enrolled in school were no longer eligible for child care assistance, and income limits were reduced from 185 percent to 53 percent of the federal poverty line. As a result, 90 percent of those formerly eligible became ineligible. The governor eventually raised the income limit to 162 percent of the federal poverty line in November 2015. But thousands of children remained without access to the subsidy program. Estimates range from 15,000 to 55,000 children. According to the OUNCE of Prevention Fund, a Chicago-based funder and operator of birth-to-five programs, 125,545 children received child care subsidies in 2015, down about 22 percent from the average 160,000 children receiving subsidies in previous years.
The state increased the amount of money a family must pay out of pocket, or , depending on income and family size. And while state payments were delayed for child care, the budget covering Illinois Department of Human Services and other social services programs, like home visiting, paid out at $0.65 on the dollar
All of which left care providers like LeFlore without the money they needed to provide care for the families who need it.
The house is busy, set on a tree-lined street just off the highway in Justice, Illinois. Three-year-old Gianna sips chocolate milk as her mother, Stephanie Dziedzic, brushes her curly brown hair. A fish tank gurgles in the background and competes with the noise of an overly friendly cat who鈥檚 making itself known by purring and nudging idle hands. Dziedzic expertly ties Gianna鈥檚 curls into a poofy ponytail before another day at Little People Montessori. Now fully dressed in a flowery shirt, pink pants, and a yellow scrunchy, Gianna takes Dziedzic鈥檚 hand and makes her way to the kitchen to finish those last bites of Fruit Loops.
Dziedzic鈥檚 fianc茅 is sleeping off a night shift, so she and her mom arrange Gianna鈥檚 pick up later in the day. It鈥檚 Thursday and Dziedzic is going to be working late as a hair stylist at Sport Clips in downtown La Grange, Illinois, 15 miles away. In 2015, the whole family鈥攕even people total鈥攎oved in together in Justice, Illinois, to cover the cost of rent and child care: Dziedzic, her mother and sister, and Gianna, and her fianc茅 Brandon, and his two children Serena and Junior. Dziedzic鈥檚 mother has also recently taken unpaid leave after surgery, but is driving for Uber to help make rent. On a day like Thursday, when Dziedzic works odd hours, Gianna鈥檚 grandmother watches her after school. Sometimes Dziedzic works two nights per week, sometimes weekends. It鈥檚 unpredictable.
Having finished breakfast, Gianna slips on her shoes and smiles as they make their way out to the large truck sitting out front, finally off to school.
Gianna was born shortly after Dziedzic graduated from cosmetology school. Until Gianna was one-and-a-half, Dziedzic and Gianna lived with Dziedzic鈥檚 mother and Dziedzic stayed home full-time. Dziedzic wanted to stay home with her daughter, but eventually had to go back to work to cover the costs of raising Gianna. Little People helped her through the process of applying for a child care subsidy so she could do so.
鈥業 can go to work with my mind at ease. I know Gianna is safe and learning by leaps and bounds.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 trying to work towards not being on assistance,鈥 Dziedzic says emphatically, 鈥渂ut [I] need all the help I can get.鈥 Until her recent engagement, Dziedzic was a single parent making minimum wage and paying off student loans. Yet even with the help of her fianc茅, moving in with her mother was the only way they could cover the cost of rent and child care. Today, Dziedzic works at Sport Clips and is paid minimum wage; she wouldn’t be able to work and pay household bills without the state child care assistance. Dziedzic recounts how her entire paycheck goes to the bills, mostly rent: 鈥淢e and my fianc茅 split 1,100 dollars just for the rent… he pays the water bill, I pay the cable bill, and I also have to pay my car insurance and my car note.鈥 What little is left鈥攖ips鈥攕he saves 鈥渇or the daycare, gas, food, and trying to do something fun with the kids in the summer.鈥 She pays $79 per month to send Gianna to the Little People Montessori Academy. Yet when asked if Little People is worth the cost, she responds: 鈥淚 can go to work with my mind at ease. I know Gianna is safe and learning by leaps and bounds.鈥 And, indeed, Gianna spends her days safely and happily with LeFlore and her best friend Farrah. After Gianna arrives at school, they sit together by the window, taking Barbie dolls out of a basket to play.
Dziedzic is terrified the budget crisis will upset the fragile balance she and her family have created to make ends meet. Every six months, recipients of child care assistance have to 鈥渞e-determine,鈥 or re-apply. She had a scare a couple months ago, when state officials said she didn’t qualify anymore. But they later determined that was due to a glitch.
The crisis has already taken a toll. Dziedzic was one of many low-wage parents now facing 聽increased parent co-pays: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a shocker鈥 they told me I have to pay $270 within the next month, and I really don鈥檛 have that extra money at this point. It used to be $79 dollars a month.鈥 So Dziedzic is stuck: If she picks up more shifts and earns more, she鈥檒l make too much money and no longer qualify for the subsidy. And if she earns less, with the higher co-pay, she won鈥檛 be able to pay her bills. 聽聽
Like LeFlore, other child care providers have continued their mission to serve the neediest families at great personal cost throughout the budget crisis. Catalina Cordero is a parent volunteer who recently moved back to Chicago. Having suffered a leg injury, Cordero lost her job and child care, which she desperately needed to find a new job. In many states, including Illinois, only working parents may apply for child care assistance. Even though she鈥檚 job hunting, Cordero doesn鈥檛 qualify. In Chicago, Erie House is trying to fill in the gaps, providing for child care and other social services for Cordero out-of-pocket.
Walking into Erie House, artwork lines the walls, and just outside, an herb and vegetable garden helps 聽children learn about plants. The governing board of directors has taken out a line of credit for $1.5 million and applied for philanthropic dollars to cover the shortfall, but it鈥檚 an open question鈥攈ow much longer can they go on, if state payments continue to be delayed. Because so many fewer children qualify for subsidies due to the budget crisis, parents unable to afford higher quality, licensed care either stop working or seek cheaper, unregulated care from family, friends or neighbors, it took Erie three-quarters of the school year to fill their classrooms. According to Erie鈥檚 director of marketing and communications, Brian Paff: 鈥淥ur preschool program enrollment is down 19 children, resulting in a total loss between $184,984 – $154,185, depending on the ages of the enrolled children.鈥 In other words, it took Erie almost a full year to fill their classrooms, and even at year end, enrollment was down by 11 percent. If the state doesn鈥檛 pass a budget, Erie may have to close classrooms, provide fewer services, and lay off staff in the coming years.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been fortunate to stay afloat pairing cuts with some new revenue,鈥 says Paff. Other providers have tried to follow Erie House鈥檚 example by taking out lines of credit, loans, soliciting for more private donations, and downsizing so they can continue to provide services to needy children regardless of whether and when the state of Illinois pays. Those other providers have folded. In January, the largest provider of social services, Lutheran Social Services of Illinois, reduced its workforce by 43 percent, eliminating more than 750 positions. In a typical 聽year, Catholic Charities operates at a loss, underwriting their 鈥媠ix 鈥嬧媍enters $2.4 million鈥 for鈥 basic operations management and staffing: the Head Start director, nutritionist, facility costs, teacher pay, and other costs. Catholic Charities closed one center in June 2016. According to Laura Rios, vice president鈥 of Child, Youth & Families for Catholic Charities, the consequences for those families without child care are dire: 鈥淲hen working parents don鈥檛 have childcare, they鈥檙e鈥 often 鈥媗eft 鈥媤ith an older sibling or home alone in unsafe neighborhoods.鈥嬧
During the 2015-2016 school year, 鈥婥atholic Charities managed six child development centers in Chicago for 1,016 children ages 0-5 and 295 children ages 6-12. All six centers are NAEYC accredited and gold-rated, the highest quality standards possible.鈥嬧 When speaking about the effect of the budget crisis, Rios commented:鈥 鈥淵ou can reduce the number of classrooms, but there is a cost to running centers鈥 鈥媋ttentive to quality care, safety, and compliance. It鈥檚 not a simple issue of opening and closing classrooms.鈥嬧 Judith Walker-Kendrick, director of the Chicago Coalition of Site-Administered Child Care Programs, provider of technical assistance to early learning agencies funded by the city of Chicago, confirmed that the number of child care providers is decreasing: 鈥淭he number of agencies has shrunk from 81 to 34 in great part because of the budget crisis.鈥
鈥榃hen working parents don鈥檛 have childcare, [children are] often 鈥媗eft 鈥媤ith an older sibling or home alone in unsafe neighborhoods.鈥
In order to provide quality care, agencies have tried, like LeFlore, 聽to braid funding, i.e. the three-legged stool. But this created problems of its own. According to Walker-Kendrick, braiding makes funding less, not more, stable: 鈥淭he three-stool premise assumes everyone鈥攆ederal, state and local governments鈥攊s on the same page. If that isn鈥檛 the case鈥攁s it is in Illinois鈥攖he stool will always collapse.鈥 In addition, because each of the funding-prongs has its own requirements, braiding complicates the administration of early learning programs. Some 60 providers, including Metropolitan Family Services and the Ounce of Prevention Fund, are suing the state for lack of payment, which advocates say has decimated the painstakingly constructed early care and learning infrastructure, primarily for children from lower-income families, for years to come.
More than a year after the budget crisis began, the state was still at a stand-still. In July of 2016, Illinois finally passed a temporary budget, but it is not enough to cover the losses child care providers and families have suffered, the damage done to the early learning infrastructure, or to provide long-term security and relief that this won鈥檛 happen again. Walker-Kendrick confirmed agencies are forced to choose between availability or quality, if not closing fully: 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 enough funding for everyone, so you have to make choices. Are you going to reach everybody or are you going to reach a few with quality? At some point you have to make a choice between quantity and quality,鈥 she said.
The budget for care isn鈥檛 just insufficient, it鈥檚 also unstable. Funding for early learning (and other relevant human services) needs a predictable baseline of funding, advocates said. 鈥淲e also need to improve the process of accessing care for both parents and providers,鈥 said Walker-Kendrick.
Though early learning quality has been a focus of Governor Rauner鈥檚 administration, the lack of funding limits child care providers鈥 ability to implement and maintain quality measures.
Quality care鈥攖hat which is essential for our littlest learners, that which Illinois has failed to provide or value, and LeFlore and so many others like her have given their own peace of mind and financial stability to offer鈥攊s only possible if you train teachers, pay them a living wage, and create a healthy working environment. Quality reforms only go so far if there is no way to sustain them. And they cannot be sustained if they are not prioritized and supported by a state that cares about its citizens.
These problems are bigger than LeFlore, and the solution shouldn鈥檛 be hers alone. She needs help. Many of the families she serves needs help. She just wishes the state of Illinois would.
Back in the dingy shopping mall, the nail salon next door now occupies a classroom LeFlore had to close and rent out. Though the situation may be more dire now, LeFlore emphasizes that this financial uncertainty is not new. Over the years, LeFlore has learned 鈥渉ow to spread the money out鈥濃攕he negotiated with her landlord to pay in installments, and takes out loans so that in months like July鈥攚hen the state sent subsidy payments nearly a month late鈥攕he can make payroll. As LeFlore closes for the day, kids trickling out with their parents, she wonders how she’s going to repay that loan and worries about the security of her financial future. These problems are bigger than LeFlore, and the solution shouldn鈥檛 be hers alone. She needs help. Many of the families she serves needs help. She just wishes the state of Illinois would.
American parents choose from a range of child care arrangements in and outside the home, ranging from the informal鈥攆riends and family members鈥攖o the more formal and regulated child care centers. The diversity of settings makes it difficult to measure and compare care arrangements, but for the purposes of the Care Index, 麻豆果冻传媒 groups care in four categories: child care centers, family child care homes; (in-home) nanny care; 聽and family, friend, and neighbor (FFN) care.
Children under 5 in Types of Child Care Arrangements
Each block represents 100,000 U.S. children.
Child care centers provide care in non-home settings. Centers may be operated privately or publicly, nonprofit or for-profit, and may receive funding from the government, parent fees, and/or donations鈥攖hey range from small centers operated out of church basements to large facilities run by corporate chains. Most centers must be licensed by the state where they operate and follow safety and quality regulations, though some states exempt certain centers, like those run by religious organizations. Most states also have quality rating and improvement systems (QRIS), which rate centers at different levels of quality, above and beyond licensing standards, and offer financial incentives and resources for improving quality. Centers that accept child care subsidies are also subject to federal regulations under the (CCDBG), which provides subsidy funding to states through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF). Centers can receive funding to provide food through the USDA鈥檚 (CACFP), which imposes additional regulations. Centers can voluntarily seek accreditation from organizations such as the (NAEYC), which sets quality standards above those included in licensing and federal regulations.
Family child care homes are settings in which to a small number of children who are not related to them. Family child care homes are usually less expensive than center care, though, like centers, family child care homes can accept child care subsidies. In most states, family child care homes are supposed to be regulated and licensed to ensure a baseline of safety and quality. 聽Some states differentiate between 鈥渓icensed鈥 and 鈥渞egistered鈥 homes, based on the number of children they are allowed to care for and the stringency of quality standards, and some homes may be license-exempt, generally if they are serving a very small number of children. However, regulations and oversight vary widely by state and in many states are extremely minimal, with only limited means of enforcing the regulations that do exist.
Like child care centers, registered family child care homes can participate in , and those that accept subsidy are subject to , even if they are . Licensed homes are usually eligible to participate in state quality rating and improvement systems (QRIS), though with different standards than for child care centers. They can also pursue accreditation by organizations such as the (NAFCC), whose quality standards go beyond basic state licensing requirements, and receive training and support from organizations such as .
Nannies and babysitters provide care in a child鈥檚 home. They may be affiliated with a nanny agency or work independently. Nanny care is unregulated, aside from basic (the 鈥渘anny tax鈥), and many parents ignore these laws in favor of paying nannies . Thus, very little reliable data on nanny care exists. One report put nanny use at around 3 percent of professional families and 2 percent of low-income families. The Care Index sample includes a higher share of families using nanny care.
Organizations including the National Domestic Workers Alliance and advocate for better compliance with existing laws and new policies with stronger legal protections for nannies, such as the .
Any discussion of the care landscape would be incomplete without mentioning informal care provided by family, friends, and neighbors. Aside from FFN providers who are paid using child care subsidies and subject to CCDF regulations, FFN care is not regulated or tracked, so its is difficult to determine.
Though FFN caregivers may be paid, many families rely on unpaid care, whether provided by family, friends, and neighbors or by parents themselves.
Though FFN caregivers may be paid, many families rely on unpaid care, whether provided by family, friends, and neighbors or by parents themselves. Some parents choose to leave the workforce in order to care for their children full-time. Parents may make this choice due to financial factors such as the high cost of child care, personal or family preference, or both. Though many parents find it rewarding to stay home, the . Although the Care Index focuses on paid care, we believe that unpaid care should also be recognized, valued, and supported through policies such as paid leave and child benefits.
It鈥檚 just after nap time in the infant room at the Sheltering Arms Model Teaching Center in Atlanta, one of 15 early learning centers open to all children, ages six weeks to five years, regardless of family income. And upon entering one of the cheerful classrooms, the first thing a visitor would notice is just how much talking is going on. In the infant room, all throughout the day, the two teachers in the room with seven infants, in between laughing and hugging, are talking, reading, talking, singing, and talking to the babies some more. Constantly.
Delane Wilkes, a teacher with 19 years of experience, gently carries a tiny baby just up from a nap to the changing table, and, looking deeply into the baby鈥檚 eyes, begins nonstop running commentary. 鈥淥K, Miss Peace, I鈥檓 going to get my gloves on and get you DRY,鈥 she says in a high sing-songy voice as she gently lays the tiny baby on the table. 鈥淥h! We鈥檙e really WET! Yeah! We鈥檝e got to get you CLEAN, girl!鈥 The teacher smiles as she swiftly changes the diaper. The baby smiles a gummy smile. 鈥淥h! Are you going to SMILE for me?鈥 The baby gurgles. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e SMILING! Yes you are!鈥
Like all the teachers at Sheltering Arms, Wilkes has been specially trained to talk this way to infants and toddlers鈥攊n a bright, high sing songy voice, called 鈥減arentese,鈥 which draws out the sounds of different words, and interacting in a warm, sensitive, responsive style. That exchange with a child, even before they can say their first words, is what researchers call 鈥.鈥 And it is all the more meaningful because Wilkes, like all teachers at the center, really knows the child: To develop strong relationships that foster learning, teachers move with the children every year until they turn four. The exchange with a loving caregiver at the changing table has everything to do with brain science and building the brain architecture鈥攖he neural circuitry鈥攖hat will lead to all future learning, health, and social, behavioral, and emotional growth.
A child is born with about 100 billion neurons, about as many stars as in the Milky Way, and about all the neurons the brain will ever have. By age three, the brain has produced twice as many connections between these neurons, and at a faster rate, than at any other time in life. This rapid growth lays the foundation not only for communication, thought, and social skills like the ability to 鈥渞ead鈥 other people, but also for what researchers call the reading brain. Despite millennia of human evolution, the brain is still wired for visual and auditory learning, not the relatively more recently developed reading and writing, which emerged with the ancient Sumerians in 3500 BCE. Learning to read and write, which are critical for survival and success in the modern world, doesn鈥檛 come naturally for the brain. It requires careful nurturing in a language-rich environment.
Get , and children will be more likely to be good readers by third grade. That, in turn, is a predictor of high school graduation rates, which predict whether a child is more likely to go on to college and thrive, or to spiral on a downward trajectory toward unemployment, teen pregnancy, or jail.
Recent research has found that the strongest predictor of a child鈥檚 future academic success and wellbeing鈥攎ore than a child鈥檚 socioeconomic status, parents鈥 education, income, or ethnicity鈥攊s the strong attachment to loving adults they have, and the quality and quantity of words those important people speak to them in their first three years.
That鈥檚 why, with so many families strapped for time, working and needing to rely on caregivers, the low quality of infant care throughout the country鈥攊s worrying. So much of academic and later income inequality starts right here: One study found that, by age three, children from impoverished backgrounds have been exposed to 13 million words, while those from more affluent backgrounds 45 million words鈥攁 30 million word gap. A gap that persisted in language skills when the children studied were 9 and 10. In fact, researchers have found that a majority of the achievement gap at age 14 was already present years before, on the first day of kindergarten.
鈥淓ssentially, by age five, you鈥檝e gone a long way toward deciding a child鈥檚 future,鈥 said Comer Yates. Yates is part of a statewide effort to promote early language nutrition called 鈥淭alk with me Baby,鈥 and is the executive director of the Atlanta Speech School, which offers free online training to parents, caregivers, and teachers around the world on the science behind why exposing children to language early is so critical, and how to do it. 鈥淭he great news is, we know what the science says. The tragedy is, we just simply aren鈥檛 applying it. There are centers that are identified as having quality, yet the interactions between adults and children is deeply flawed. You can鈥檛 have quality without rich language and deep social and emotional bonds developed between adults and children,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o our work is focused on the radical change in adult behavior and engagement with children, birth to age eight, in order to construct the 鈥榬eading brain,鈥 and develop vocabulary, executive function, self-regulation, critical thinking, and empathy.鈥
Even calling the work child care, rather than early childhood education, and workers 鈥渃aregivers鈥 rather than 鈥渢eachers鈥 is off base, he said. 鈥淭hese are people responsible for some of the most important work around brain construction.鈥
The work to transform the early care and learning workforce is urgent, Yates said. Because what matters is not only the number of words a child is exposed to, but the relationship the child has with the person speaking them. 鈥淗earing words on TV or a car radio doesn鈥檛 make any difference,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 those words coming from a parent, a teacher, someone who deeply matters to you, on whom you are counting鈥攖hat鈥檚 what maps that vocabulary onto your brain, because this memorable person is offering memorable words to you.鈥
Instead, so many caregivers, poorly paid and many poorly trained, inconsistent with the brain science, social-emotional development, and how children learn through play, have been charged with concentrating on behavior management, he said. Indeed, found that three and four-year-old preschoolers are expelled at three times the rate of students in kindergarten through twelfth grade. 鈥淚f we go into an early learning center and we see adults telling children to be quiet, it is our very firm conviction that that鈥檚 a toxic place for children,鈥 he said. 鈥淔ocusing on having a compliant child fails to put a child on the path to having a 鈥榬eading brain.鈥欌
And a toxic environment at the youngest ages, especially if it鈥檚 coupled with poverty, neglect, trauma or other stressors, can have lasting effects. 鈥淚t鈥檚 ironic, people think even today that if you can鈥檛 remember your early childhood, it doesn鈥檛 have an impact. But it鈥檚 the exact opposite,鈥 said Jennifer Elkins, a professor of social work at the University of Georgia who studies the impact of toxic stress and trauma. 鈥淚n that first year, everything is growing so exponentially that cumulative stressors and adversity can build up and change the brain and how it operates. It鈥檚 a domino effect that can impact you the rest of your life. But, the important thing is, we also know that early intervention can have just as powerful an effect. That鈥檚 why high quality child care is so vital.鈥
Yet in Georgia, one recent state study found that about 70 percent of all the licensed infant care was of poor quality. And a comprehensive national study found that the majority of care in the United States is 鈥渇air,鈥 with only 10 percent high quality, and 10 percent downright awful. Many policymakers, the ones who hold the purse strings and the power to remake the system, simply don鈥檛 鈥渂uy into鈥 the idea that caregiving for infants and toddlers is really education, said Pam Tatum, head of Quality Care for Children, a Georgia nonprofit. 鈥淧eople ask me sarcastically, 鈥楬ow do you educate an infant? What do you do, put kids at little desks?鈥欌 she said, exasperated. 鈥淏irth to three is where the quality suffers the most. It鈥檚 the most expensive, the hardest to find, and yet it鈥檚 one of the most important times for a child鈥檚 development.鈥
Back at Sheltering Arms, the infant teachers keep up a constant stream of serve and return communication for the rest of the afternoon, talking to the cooing babies as they shake rattles, sing songs, listen to soft piano music, feed them, change them, and play with them. One child lays on a play mat, reaching for bright hanging toys overhead. Another makes a wobbly attempt to stand. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e standing UP!鈥 lead teacher Lisa White says, waiting until the child smiles an enormous smile. 鈥淎re you going to DANCE now?鈥 she asks the child. 鈥淵AY! You鈥檙e DANCING!鈥
White, who has 21 years of experience as a teacher, changed her entire approach once she learned about the brain science behind how children learn. Although she鈥檇 always been loving, she knows now how critical forming a strong attachment is to develop the kind of trust that facilitates language nutrition and healthy development. Now, she will get down on the floor and spend as much one-on-one time playing with each baby as she can. She also keeps a close eye on those she gives time to explore on their own. Although White used to read to babies, she now makes sure she shows them the books while she reads, too, and points to words and letters. And now, she talks. All the time. 鈥淭he training really changed my mind,鈥 she said.
But that kind of deep attachment and consistency in infant care is rare, said Shaneshia Roberson, a professional development specialist at Sheltering Arms and co-leader of another statewide effort to infuse brain science into early learning called 鈥淏etter Brains for Babies.鈥 At a time when science shows that what infants need most are strong relationships with teachers in order to develop healthy brains, to feel safe, to be willing to take risks, explore their environment, play and talk and listen, she said the meager pay and low quality in most infant and child care settings often chase teachers away. Which only perpetuates inequality. 鈥淲e see so much turnover in early care and education,鈥 she said, her eyes welling with tears. In Georgia, as in the rest of the country, more than one-third of all early care and learning teachers turnover every year.
Down the hall from the chatter in the infant room, the 鈥渟erve and return鈥 dialogue is more open-ended in the toddler classrooms. Colorful signs posted on the walls remind the teachers to get inside the child鈥檚 world, and to create an environment where they can begin to learn to make their own choices, which develops self-regulation and executive function skills. 鈥淗ow could we work together to solve this?鈥 Reads one sign. 鈥淐an you describe what happened?鈥 鈥淲hat do you like best about it?鈥
In the carpeted play area, a little boy pulls out a bin of wooden blocks. A teacher who knows him well gets down on the floor with him.
鈥淲hat are you making?鈥 she asks.
鈥淎 house,鈥 the child answers.
鈥淲ho lives in your house?鈥
鈥淢辞尘尘测.鈥
鈥淲hat do you do in your house? Tell me about it鈥
He makes a square of blocks on the floor and explains that it鈥檚 his garden.
鈥淎 garden! What do you grow in your garden? Collard greens? Spinach?鈥
鈥淎pples!鈥 the child says.
The two continue to talk as they imagine life in the house, planting orange trees, because oranges are delicious, building a roof, then putting 聽on a garage, and a room to play basketball. They muse about what other kind of fruit he can grow in his garden, who will come to visit, and what color the front door could be, the two building the conversation, and their connection, as the little house takes shape.
The cost of child care in the United States is expensive. For everyone. The Care Index found that the average cost of center-based care in the United States is one-fifth of the median household income, and infant care costs more than college in 33 states. For a parent making minimum wage, the average cost of care would take up an unsustainable two-thirds of their earnings, with little left over for rent or mortgage payments, food, transportation, clothing, and other basic necessities.
And there are real economic consequences鈥攆or families, communities, and the economy鈥攚hen the burden of shouldering that high price tag falls disproportionately on families. And it does. has found that parents pick up 60 percent of the cost of child care; federal, state and local governments shoulder 39 percent; and businesses and philanthropy contribute just 1 percent.
Source: Anne Mitchell, Louise Stoney, and Harriet Ditcher, Financing Child Care in the United States. 2001.
When parents can鈥檛 find affordable, quality child care, their only alternatives are to cut back on work hours, seek alternative work arrangements, look for care on the unregulated, cheaper 鈥済ray market,鈥 rely on an informal network of families, friends, and neighbors, or even exit the labor market completely to take on child care responsibilities themselves. This move is not without consequences: Parents who exit the labor market could be more than three times their annual salary every year they are not working the opportunity cost of wage growth and retirement savings, according to a Center for American Progress report. Dropping out of the workforce, however, is not an option for working single parents, who must seek informal care or a limited number of government subsidies to pay for licensed care in order to support their families and continue working.
Women are the ones who typically have faced these trade-offs between work and care, both because they generally earn less than men, and because prevailing cultural norms still expect mothers to take on primary responsibility for caregiving. Women around the world do 75 percent of the unpaid work of housework and child care. A recent found that that invisible work, if given market value, would equal at least 13 percent of the global GDP. Further, they estimated that creating conditions and policies to better recognize and more fairly redistribute this unpaid labor and create more parity for women in the paid labor force, could add $12 trillion to the global GDP by 2025. And $2.1 trillion in the United States alone.
In the United States today, 65 percent of children under six have both parents in the workforce. This is a marked difference from the labor division of , when only 28 percent of children under five had two working parents. And today, a growing number of families are headed by a single parent, between 72 and 89 percent of whom are employed. For the majority of American parents, child care is an expensive necessity, which leaves people wondering: ?
Unlike in previous eras, when child care costs barely registered in a typical American family鈥檚 budget, today, the burden is much higher. Child Care Aware鈥檚 2015 Parents and the High Cost of Child Care report shows that child care cost is one of the , second only to mortgage or rent. From 2009 to 2012 alone, the cost of child care rose at of the Consumer Price Index. Indeed, the Care Index, like , found that the average cost of full-time infant care in a center costs more than in-state college tuition in 33 states. The average cost of center-based care for children ages 0-4 eats up 18 percent of the median household income and is 90 percent or more the cost of rent in 15 states and the District of Columbia. The average annual cost of nanny care is three times the average cost of a year at a public college.
Why is child care so expensive? In a word: people. It takes teachers to provide the early care and learning. And a lot of them. Infants, toddlers, and preschoolers need much more supervision and one-on-one care than children in K-12 education鈥攁nd safety and quality requirements reflect that need. While state regulations allow one teacher to teach anywhere from 18 to 30 elementary school-age children, the National Association for the Education of Young Children recommends, depending on group size, one teacher for every three or four infants, one teacher for every three to six toddlers, and one teacher for every six to ten preschoolers.
The cost of that labor is expensive. The true cost is more than parents can pay, especially at a time in life when many are starting out, haven鈥檛 reached their full earning potential, and haven鈥檛 yet built up savings. So child care providers can only charge as much tuition as the parental market will bear, then must seek out other sources of income from federal, state, or local government, businesses, and private philanthropy to cover the difference.
But the problem is, tuition and alternative income are not sufficient to cover that difference. Which means providers must keep costs low. Because so much of the child care infrastructure is really a patchwork of small businesses, nonprofits and often altruistic 鈥渕om and pop鈥 family home care centers, most providers operate on razor-thin margins, typically less than 1 percent. And approximately 80 percent of a child care program鈥檚 cost is devoted to payroll and related expenses鈥攎aking employment costs the area a provider can target when strategizing to reduce cost to themselves.
It should come as no surprise, then, that early care and learning teachers earn poverty 鈥攁mong the lowest wages of any profession, one recent study found. The early education workforce earns, on average, $9.77 an hour鈥攍ess than bellhops and parking garage attendants. Nearly half are part of families that qualify for at least one form of public support, such as food stamps, Medicaid, or child care subsidies. And those who teach infants and toddlers make about 70 percent of what those who teach three and four-year-olds make.
According to a report released by the U.S. Departments of Education and Health & Human Services, there is a noticeable gap between early childhood educators鈥 average salaries and those of elementary school educators. The Early Childhood Workforce Index notes an 鈥渋rrational wage structure,鈥 in which wages are more linked to program funding pressures than meaningful indicators of caregiver needs and quality. An notes that most caregivers are not able to afford care for their own children.
According to a report released by the U.S. Departments of Education and Health & Human Services, there is a noticeable gap between early childhood educators鈥 average salaries and those of elementary school educators.
This is a problem. While caregivers are an part of child development, parents鈥 ability to work, and family well-being, low wages send the message that they are not valued鈥攕o much so that they do not deserve a living wage. Perhaps more importantly, low wages have been linked to a high turnover rate in the early childcare workforce, leading to care of inconsistent鈥攁nd often low鈥攓uality. Reducing wages is incongruous with a desire to hire people trained in child development and capable of providing quality care. The current system undercuts quality, , and still presents prices so high that many consumers are pushed into unlicensed markets of questionable quality.
The child care market . The numbers simply don鈥檛 add up: It costs more to supply early care and learning than families are able to pay. That鈥檚 because rather than work like a traditional market, where prices and efficiencies are governed by the laws of supply and demand, the early care and learning market works like the market for education. In K-12 educational markets, tuition alone can鈥檛 cover the cost of the service (). That鈥檚 why education is subsidized鈥攑ublic education subsidized by the government, and private education subsidized by private donations and government tax breaks and grants.
The child care market thus requires substantial investment from public and private sources. The current dysfunctional market has serious . Demand stays high because parents need child care. But because parent-paid tuition doesn鈥檛 cover the true cost of child care, and because investment in child care is insufficient, providers may be forced to operate in ways that could jeopardize both quality and availability of care to cover their own costs鈥攂y, for example, cutting back on supplies or by paying caregivers poverty wages. Some providers try to make the numbers work by cutting back on or closing infant and toddler classrooms, which, because of the lower teacher-student ratios required, are much more expensive to maintain. But not all cost-saving moves are negative: In some communities, small child care providers are beginning to come together to pool resources, share costs, and create economies of scale鈥攂y, for example, sharing expensive administrative functions, buying supplies in bulk, and forming Early Childhood Education Shared Service Alliances鈥攖o bring costs down.
When the price of licensed child care gets too high, parents may be forced to opt out in favor of a cheaper option, such as family, friend, and neighbor care. But because these networks of care are unregulated, the level of quality is unknown. In short, the current child care structure 聽is 聽unsustainable and puts quality at risk.
There are only a few tools to help parents shoulder the high cost of care. A limited amount of relief can be found for most families through child care tax credits, and, for even fewer families, subsidy programs.
For working parents looking to offset child care costs, most families can find theoretical relief in the (CDCTC). Upon filing state and federal income taxes, families may receive credits worth 25 to 30 percent of child care costs, capped at $3,000. (Separately, about 61 percent of businesses offer employees Dependent Care Assistance Plans to help them pay for care with up to $5,000 pre-tax dollars a year, according to the 2014 National Study of the Employer.)
That relief may well only exist in theory, however; despite its intent, this tax credit has several limitations (which echo limits of tax credits as social policy more generally):
For a small portion of families, child care subsidies provide more relief. Child care subsidies, such as those granted through the Child Care and Development Fund (authorized under the Child Care and Development Block Grant), aim to make child care more accessible to low-income working families. They do this through vouchers that can be used as payment with participating providers or through contracts with providers. State-set reimbursement rates affect the amount of money child care providers receive from the government each time a parent makes use of subsidized child care. Unfortunately, though, many child care subsidy programs present significant obstacles to families seeking relief, for employed individuals and long waiting lists, so subsidy use remains fairly low. are intended to streamline that process: for instance, families that qualify for subsidies can receive them for a year, unlike in the past, where a change in work hours, school schedule, or job required a lengthy re-evaluation.
Neither the federal government nor the states have committed to fully funding subsidies to help all economically disadvantaged families with child care, providing funds to cover . And states set very low income eligibility levels for subsidy help (based on already-weak poverty metrics), which restricts the number of families who can get help to pay for the care they need to continue working. A by the National Women鈥檚 Law Center (NWLC) found that a family with an income above 150 percent of the federal poverty level鈥攐r $30,135 for a family of three 鈥攃ould not qualify for assistance in seventeen states. (Using an Economic Policy Institute , the NWLC figured that, in most communities, a family income needs to equal 200 percent of the poverty level to meet its basic needs, including child care.) For families unable to afford the high cost of quality child care, yet unable to qualify for subsidy assistance, access to quality care is severely limited.
Even for those parents who are able to receive child care subsidies, reimbursement rates are often too low for parents to afford most child care. Although states are to use up to date reimbursement rates based on current market surveys, many states use data that is outdated鈥攊n some cases, by as much as 10 years. So subsidy reimbursement rates are frequently set much lower than the true market rate of care, which makes higher-priced quality-rated centers reluctant to accept them. As a result, many parents are stuck paying high copayments, with few available options for care. And providers offering subsidized care often shoulder a loss when they accept a subsidy payment below what they would normally charge for delivering care. To make up the difference, many providers must cobble together money through community fundraising, donations, and grants just to keep the business afloat.
Because the child care subsidy system relies on voluntary participation of care providers, it is important that state-set CCDF policies sufficiently incentivize them to participate. But burdensome administrative requirements, fees, and other state-set policies can make it unappealing and difficult for providers to participate in subsidy programs.
One policy proposal to encourage the provision of affordable, quality child care is tiered reimbursement for providers: Programs of higher quality, as determined by state QRIS standards, will be offered higher reimbursement rates or bonuses. But this is an imperfect solution. Because bonuses from tiered payments are modest and generally lower than the high cost of improving quality, tiered reimbursement rates, while a good start, are not sufficient on their own鈥攚ithout significant public investment鈥搕o address cost issues for providers and families.
Most people know intuitively that the cost of child care is too high. But the impact of that cost extends beyond the families that must shoulder the burden. Businesses pay, too, as much as $4 billion a year, by one estimate, in lost worker productivity and absenteeism due to child care breakdowns. As long as the child care system continues to undervalue its workers and jeopardize quality by pricing consumers into unregulated family care, parents will continue to face the choice between care and work. The path is clear: Either our policies will continue to stunt overall productivity, economic growth, and progress towards gender equality and equal opportunity for all, or we will choose to invest in quality education for children, gender equity in the workforce, economic growth, and a financial and cultural shift toward valuing care work.
High quality child care pays all kinds of dividends: personal, societal, and economic. For example, children who participate in high-quality early care and education have fewer behavioral problems, greater educational attainment, and higher earnings later in life. According to one study, for every dollar invested in early education, society receives $7 in returns through increased tax revenue and reduced public spending on criminal justice, remedial education, and other costs. Some studies set the number even higher. High-quality care and education can help close the achievement gap for low-income children, though higher-income children experience large benefits, too. Parents can go to work and know that their children are in good hands, so child care improves , especially for mothers, who are still most often expected to be the primary caregivers.
All child care programs that meet licensing requirements provide a basic level of safety, allowing parents to work and meet other obligations. But here鈥檚 the problem: Only have on children鈥檚 learning and development.
However, high-quality programs are often hard to find. Though we know quality varies widely across settings and locations, it is difficult to know by just how much: The way we measure the quality of early care and education in the United States is inconsistent and often flawed. State licensing requirements and quality rating and improvement systems (QRIS) vary so widely that comparing states is very difficult, and federal policies regulating quality only apply to programs that accept subsidies. Many children are also in unlicensed care of unknown quality, whether it is legally license-exempt informal care or a provider illegally operating without a license. Among children receiving subsidies, nearly one in five are in unlicensed care. In the Care Index, we measure quality using the percentage of programs accredited by the (NAEYC) or the (NAFCC), independent organizations that accredit child care centers and family child care homes, respectively. This method is imprecise, but, with existing data, it鈥檚 one of the only ways to compare quality in different states. And the data we do have indicates a patchwork system that is mediocre at best. The Care Index found that, on average, only 11 percent of U.S. child care centers and family homes are accredited. 聽
Though quality is difficult to measure, we used accreditation as a baseline measure of safety and teacher-child interactions.
The 0-5 years are crucial for children鈥檚 learning and development. From birth, children are actively working to understand the world around them In the first few years of life, a child鈥檚 brain makes 700, producing twice as 聽many connections and at a faster rate than at any other time in life. This rapid growth forms the neural foundation upon which all later learning will be built. Early childhood education that encourages discovery through play, rich language, and engages children鈥檚 capacity for conceptual reasoning, abstract thinking, and creativity can to develop, grow, and learn new things. Young children are still , and high-quality early education and care helps them develop basic like focus, self-regulation, memory, flexibility, and motivation. Children also learn , as well as , which are not only intrinsically important but also affect later academic success.
From birth, children are actively working to understand the world around them In the first few years of life, a child鈥檚 brain makes 700 to 1,000 critical new neural connections every second, producing twice as 聽many connections and at a faster rate than at any other time in life.
Children鈥檚 interactions and relationships with adults, including early childhood educators, are some of the . Nurturing and secure relationships with teachers as well as parents support children鈥檚 social, emotional, and cognitive development. Children experience stress when they don鈥檛 have reliably supportive relationships with caregivers, with long-term consequences for their wellbeing.
High-quality early care and education, then, requires a safe and healthy environment where development can flourish. That鈥檚 true whether a child is being cared for by family and friends, a nanny, in a family child care home, in a child care center, or at school. All children, regardless of age, race, ethnicity, language, socioeconomic status, family structure, or ability, deserve high-quality care and education that meets their specific needs.
Though measuring quality can be a complex task, researchers generally divide early care and education quality into two types: .
Structural quality refers to static, material characteristics of programs and staff鈥攕ometimes considered as the input factors that are easily regulated. Commonly used indicators of structural quality include teacher-child ratios, group sizes, staff education and experience, and staff compensation. For pre-K, length of day and school year are also important factors. Structural factors are easiest to quantify, but don鈥檛 capture the child鈥檚 direct experience鈥攏amely, the quality of their interactions with care providers.
Process quality refers to children鈥檚 relationships and interactions with teachers. Some of the most important aspects of process quality are whether teachers are warm and emotionally supportive toward children, how they manage their classrooms, and how they encourage and support children鈥檚 learning. Process quality is related to, but separate from, structural quality. Structural factors like low child-teacher ratios and well-trained staff can help foster better interactions, but do not on their own guarantee process quality鈥攚hich, , is more strongly correlated with like .
But because structural quality is much easier to measure and regulate than process quality, structural indicators are often used as proxies for overall quality. There are some exceptions鈥攆or example, Head Start rates programs on process quality鈥攂ut most state licensing requirements and QRIS focus almost exclusively on structural factors. But structural quality is most important as a foundation for process quality. The two are not the same. Measuring process quality would provide a clearer picture of what鈥檚 going on in classrooms than structural measures alone, but it can be expensive.
Measuring process quality would provide a clearer picture of what鈥檚 going on in classrooms than structural measures alone, but it can be expensive.
Most of the research cited in this brief focuses on child care centers because they have been studied more extensively than family child care homes, nanny care, or other types of care. that quality is often lower in informal settings such as family child care homes than in child care centers, likely because informal settings are not as tightly regulated. This does not mean, however, that there are not good-quality family child care home options. All settings require the same basic quality elements: nurturing, supportive caregivers, and teachers who can provide a language-rich environment and age-appropriate learning opportunities. And developing strong, consistent measures of both structural and process quality is crucial for ensuring quality care across settings.
Research findings are mixed about the effects of teacher education on quality. Though some studies have found that with higher degree levels or more years of education are , find . The same is true for research looking at whether it鈥檚 better to have specific training in early childhood education鈥攕ome studies find an effect, while others do not.
One likely reason for these findings is that many teacher-training programs simply aren鈥檛 very good. For example, many bachelor鈥檚 degree programs for pre-K teachers don鈥檛 require high-quality student-teaching opportunities, courses on child development, or training on how to build children鈥檚 language skills. Despite these issues, though, most experts believe that a well-educated teaching workforce is an important foundation for quality early care and education, especially if the quality of teacher training improves.
Inadequate compensation makes it difficult to attract and retain the best teachers for early education and care. Although pre-K teachers need a level of skill and training comparable to early elementary school teachers, their salaries are, on average, what kindergarten teachers earn. Teacher aides and caregivers who work with infants and toddlers fare even worse. Low pay can lead to financial stress (hardly ideal for one dealing with very small children) and high staff turnover鈥攖he average departure rate across all centers is 13 percent, and 25 percent for centers that experience any turnover. This is not only costly for programs but can also have negative effects on children. Higher teacher pay is a crucial element of quality.
Research on (the number of children for each adult) and group sizes (the number of children in a classroom, which may have multiple adults) generally between and higher process quality. Though studies are unable to determine exactly why this is true, it seems that, all else being equal, children get more individualized attention when ratios are lower and group sizes are small. Teachers are better able to manage classrooms and educate effectively.
The amount of time preschool-age children spend in early education settings significantly affects how much children benefit from them. a full-day program instead of a part-day program, getting two years of pre-K instead of one, and continuing education during the summer or for a longer school year all have clear , as long as the program is in other areas.
Structural factors are a crucial foundation for process quality: The learning environment and the interactions between teachers and children. In a high-quality learning environment, children build trusting relationships with warm, friendly caregivers who are sensitive to their needs and to their words and signals. Children can interact frequently both with caregivers and with each other. Infants and toddlers learn through play and social interaction, and preschoolers spend time in small groups and pairs as well as with the whole group. Caregivers use lots of complex language and 鈥渟erve and return鈥 back-and-forth, open-ended exchanges, and they read books interactively with children. Learning is driven by children鈥檚 curiosity and interests, with caregivers providing .
In a high-quality learning environment, children build trusting relationships with warm, friendly caregivers who are sensitive to their needs and responsive to their words and signals.
Because process quality is more subjective than structural quality, researchers have developed many different systems to measure it. Two of the most commonly used measures are the (ERS) and the (CLASS), which both have a variety of scales tailored to different age levels and settings. Raters trained to use the scales observe classrooms for a period of time and rate them on a set of quality indicators, then produce an overall quality rating.
Studies have shown that higher ratings on the CLASS and the ERS are associated with better child outcomes, such as school readiness, and can than many structural indicators. This is , which has come to be regarded as a more rigorous and targeted measure of process quality compared to the ERS.
Process quality measures like the CLASS are not being administered consistently in most early care and education settings: Using these tools requires investments of time and money. But they can provide valuable insights about the quality of early learning.
Promoting quality early care and education will require strong public investment in families鈥 access to high-quality, affordable options. Improving teacher training, compensation, and ongoing support does not come cheap.
Efforts to improve quality also need to be coupled with better methods of measuring it. Though good tools exist to measure quality, such as the CLASS, they are not used consistently enough to be able to compare quality in different locations and settings. Better data collection on the quality of early education and care could help illuminate both the bright spots and weak points of the system, and how to strengthen it.
Lowering the cost and increasing the quality of care only gets us part of the way to a better system. The other huge piece of the puzzle is availability鈥攎aking sure there are enough accessible, appropriate spaces for every child who needs care. Even if appropriate spots are theoretically available, families must be able to reasonably access them鈥攎eaning care must be accessible by available transportation and during the times it is needed for the ages of the children who need it. After all, improving quality and reducing cost can only have an impact on families who are able to find and access care in the first place.
The Care Index found that the availability of care鈥攖he proportion of the number of caregivers to the number of children under age five who may need care鈥攊s highest in six states, mainly in the Northeast: Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, and New Jersey. Availability of child care is also high in Washington, D.C. Seven states with the lowest availability are the largely western and more rural states of Wyoming, South Dakota, Idaho, New Mexico, Utah, Hawaii, and Alaska.
Improving quality and reducing cost can only have an impact on families who are able to find and access care in the first place.
But care is not always most available in the states where families have the most need. For instance, South Dakota has the highest share of families with children under 18 where all parents work鈥82 percent. Yet the Care Index found it has among the lowest availability of care, suggesting families are relying on informal networks of unpaid care, or the gray market of paid care, either by choice or by necessity.
The Index found that Utah, too, has low levels of available care. That may not be surprising as Utah is also the state with the lowest share of families with children under 18 where all parents work. Even so, in a majority of Utah families with children, 63 percent, all parents are working.
Ensuring that care is available to all is crucial to building a strong care system. But part of the problem is that very little data exists on availability. Earlier studies have found that child care centers are least available in nonmetropolitan and poor communities, and family home care most readily available in nonmetropolitan, mixed-income areas. But without more detailed, precise information, it鈥檚 difficult to know how to design policies that will address the places and populations most in need.
We measured states according to the population of in-home and in-center child care professionals, as a proportion of the number of children under 5 in each state. A state that measures 100 in this index has the same availability as the average for the United States; each 15 points represents one standard deviation from the mean, so 115 is one standard deviation higher availability than average for the United States.
In the Care Index, we measured availability for each state as a simple ratio of the number of child care providers (both individually employed and employed by child care centers) to the number of children under the age of five. (More detailed information can be found in our methodology.) But this method has its limits. Due to limited data, our Index can look only at an aggregate measure of coverage: the total number of caregivers relative to the total number of children. A more precise availability measure, on the other hand, would look at how well services match families鈥 needs across three dimensions: geography, time, and type of care.
The first of these dimensions, geography, means that care must be nearby: If child care is not readily accessible to parents, it is, of course, useless to them. This is a particularly relevant issue in , where child care is least likely to be nearby and public transportation systems may be insufficient or unavailable.
Second, care must be available during the time鈥攖ime of day and time of the year鈥攖hat families need it. Some parents work long or irregular hours or shifts, or work weekends or evenings, and may child care outside of traditional 9-to-5 business hours and on short notice, as with . Unfortunately, these services are often difficult to find. Many parents also struggle to find care during the .
Third, care must be age-appropriate. An abundance of preschools doesn鈥檛 help a family seeking care for their 6-month-old infant, for example. Age-appropriate care is essential for child development and school readiness.
While these three dimensions make an ideal measure of availability, they can be very difficult to capture in practice. Relatively few studies exist on availability, compared to the high volume of data collection and research on quality and cost.
One effort, ChildCare Map鈥檚 report on Philadelphia, looks at population age breakdowns, transportation needs and available routes, and quality ratings of providers to map overall care availability in the region. Likewise, the 2016 National Survey of Early Childcare & Education looks at the proportions of child care providers in different locations who have specific characteristics, such as being able to provide infant care, or being able to care for children for more than 30 hours weekly. However, it does not look at the total number of providers or the number of children needing care. A report from Georgia State University examines availability in several rural Georgia counties by location, though not by age or time frame.
More and better data is needed so that policymakers can address child care availability with precision and accuracy.
While these studies are important steps in the right direction, they still do not fully capture the number and characteristics of child care slots available relative to the children who need them nationwide. More and better data is needed so that policymakers can address child care availability with precision and accuracy. If better data existed, government and businesses might be able to, for instance, target investments in better public transportation infrastructure, or use zoning ordinances or redevelopment tax funds to incentivize more providers to build facilities in particular areas.
The current child care system in the United States isn鈥檛 working well for anyone, even though the majority of children in the United States are being raised in families where all parents work for pay, and the majority of children have, since the 1990s, been in some form of 聽鈥渘on-maternal鈥 care from the age of six months. The Care Index data shows that no one state is providing all three of the pillars that constitute a functioning early care and learning system that supports both working families of all socioeconomic levels and the child development needs of all children: affordable cost, high quality, and easy availability.
Instead, families must rely on a patchwork system that that is expensive to the point of ; difficult to find; and , with teachers paid poverty wages, turnover high and small providers operating on razor-thin margins.
The Care Index found that the average cost of child care in centers is nearly one-fifth the median household income, and nearly two-thirds of a minimum wage workers鈥 earnings. Nationally, only 11 percent of centers and family homes are accredited to meet quality standards. As for availability, the 麻豆果冻传媒 Care Report profiled one parent in Georgia who wanted to find quality care for her two young children close to her work, but couldn鈥檛 afford any licensed establishment within a 20-mile radius.
There is a reason that this hodgepodge child care infrastructure exists in the United States: Policymakers decided in the early 1970s that child care was the private responsibility of families, not a public investment in the economy for the good of society and the future, and that a functioning child care system would have 鈥渇amily-weakening implications.鈥
In 1971, Congress passed the Comprehensive Child Care Development Fund, a bipartisan effort to create a network of nationally funded, comprehensive child care centers. They were to be administered at the local level and provide high-quality early education, nutrition, and medical services. The services were to be universal, available to all regardless of income on a sliding scale. (During World War II, under the Lanham Act, the federal government supported 3,000 such child care centers in every state, except New Mexico, in order for women to go to work.)
The idea of a government role in child care had broad public support in the early 1970s. Surveys showed that a majority of both men and women not only favored setting up a workable child care system, but that they thought the federal government should play an important role in supporting it, Kimberly Morgan writes in her book, A Child of the Sixties.
Yet President Richard Nixon vetoed the bill, writing that it would have committed the government 鈥渢o the side of communal approaches to child rearing over against the family-centered approach.鈥 A government role in child care, he said, should be an 鈥渆volutionary鈥 decision, taken after 鈥済reat national debate,鈥 with an eye to 鈥渃ement[ing] the family in its rightful position as the keystone of our civilization.鈥
The time for that great national debate is now.
Family is still a keystone, but the shape and structure of what constitutes a family has evolved, opening up ties of love and choice, unlike in the early 1970s, when breadwinner-homemaker families were more of the norm for middle-income families, and were held up by policymakers as the ideal family arrangement. Families鈥 relationships to work has evolved, too, with families where all parents work in the marketplace now the norm. Lawmakers in the 1970s, and even some today, worry that a quality child care system will only encourage parents, namely mothers, to work outside the home. Yet that happened anyway鈥攁 majority of mothers of young children now work for pay both out of choice and necessity鈥攚ithout any encouragement or supportive child care system at all. Mothers are now the primary breadwinners in of dual-income and single parent homes.
By failing to act in the 1970s, the makeshift early care and learning system that sprang up as a result not only doesn鈥檛 work, but the system itself is now what鈥檚 weakening families鈥攃reating financial hardship and stress for parents and families, particularly the most vulnerable, for teachers, and providers. The system is failing businesses, and failing to provide all children with rich, developmentally appropriate early care and education at a time when their brain architecture, the foundation for all future learning, is rapidly forming.
And the subject of that great debate should be not whether, but how to create a high-quality, affordable, easily available early care and learning system for all children from birth to age five for all families, particularly those most vulnerable, that:
A functioning system will require a rethinking of the current jerry-rigged structure. Our goal with this report is to provide a broad vision of how critical a high quality early care and learning system is for a fair and egalitarian society, to establish some basic principles, to thoroughly explore a handful of innovative policy ideas, like universal basic income, and to set the stage for that great debate. Although not a comprehensive list, a functioning system will, at a minimum, require:
Other innovative experiments, like home visiting programs; two-generation approaches that support both parents and children; and teacher training based on brain science, like the free, online Cox Campus at the Atlanta Speech School; show great promise. And while the cost of broad, systemic change may appear great, the real costs of continuing to lurch along in the current system without the full support of the public sector are even greater.
Let the great debate begin.
At some point, almost everyone will have to take time away from work to care for a new child, a family member who is sick, or to recover from a personal illness. Caring for others, and receiving care ourselves, is part of being human. It鈥檚 the foundation of the economy; we wouldn鈥檛 have a workforce with no one to care for and nurture employees. And it鈥檚 a key component of leading a fulfilling life. Care work can be some of the most joyful work that we will ever do鈥攊f we can take the time to do it without fear of being economically or socially penalized. But all too often, that鈥檚 not the case. The vast majority of states and workplaces still have no paid family leave policies, and this can hit working families with new children especially hard. They鈥檙e often caught in a double bind: They can鈥檛 afford to take unpaid time off work to care for their child, but they also can鈥檛 afford the astronomical cost of child care.
We see a guaranteed paid family leave scheme, funded through a national social insurance program, with supports for parents exiting and re-entering work and for businesses to ensure work coverage and smooth transitions, as a big part of solving the infant care problem in the United States. Paid family leave is currently how all other advanced economies resolve infant care, often with paid leaves for one or both parents of several months to a year or more. Infant care is the most expensive kind of child care, because it requires more teachers with smaller groups of babies and more one-on-one care than does care for older children. The Care Index found that center-based infant care costs, on average, 12 percent more than care for older children. The Index also found that the average cost of center-based care for infants is more than the cost of in-state tuition at a four-year college in 33 states. More, the average cost for nanny care is more than three times the cost of college, more than half the median household income, and 188 percent of a minimum wage earner鈥檚 income. Infant care is also difficult to find, as some providers close more expensive infant and toddler classrooms in order to stay in business.
Care work can be some of the most joyful work that we will ever do鈥攊f we can take the time to do it without fear of being economically or socially penalized. But all too often, that鈥檚 not the case. The vast majority of states and workplaces still have no paid family leave policies, and this can hit working families with new children especially hard.聽
Paid leave could help address these issues, and more, by helping families to defray the high cost of infant care and making it easier to combine breadwinning and caregiving responsibilities without penalty. 聽Many working parents say they ; building in this quality time could improve their well-being and, ultimately, their productivity at work.
The United States is one of very few countries worldwide without guaranteed paid parental leave at the federal level. The Family and Medical Insurance Leave Act (FMLA), the only existing federal leave policy in the U.S., guarantees eligible employees of covered employers twelve weeks of unpaid leave in a 12-month period for specified family or medical reasons. But there are with the FMLA resulting in unequal access and . FMLA issues include a narrow definition of family, requirement that businesses granting leave have more than 50 employees, and, most importantly, the fact that leave under FMLA is unpaid, and therefore burdensome for those who cannot afford the loss of wages.
States are welcome to develop their own, more expansive policies, but not many have taken on this task, and even fewer have done so comprehensively. Only in the U.S. currently guarantee paid family and medical leave: California, New Jersey, and Rhode Island. New York鈥檚 paid family leave will begin being phased in starting 2018. Washington state passed, but has yet to fund, paid family leave. Five states currently have paid sick leave policies. (A detailed state-by-state breakdown of work leave insurance policies can be .)
In most states, employees taking leave are eligible only for a percentage of their weekly compensation, up to a predetermined ceiling. For low-income workers, the partial compensation can be so low as to make taking leave close to impossible. If a full-time worker earning minimum state wage ($8.38) in New Jersey, for example, took one week of leave, he or she would only earn $221鈥攐nly 66 percent of their usual $335 per week. It is no surprise, then, that socioeconomic status greatly affects paid leave .
There are proposals to improve paid leave on both sides of the political aisle. On the left, there is the Family Act, pending in Congress, which would grant two-thirds of monthly income for 12 weeks to cover parental or medical leave. The act would be funded by employee and employer payroll contributions of 0.2 percent of a worker鈥檚 wages to a government fund, which would be administered by the Social Security Administration. On the right, there is the , proposed by the conservative American Action Forum. This would establish a paid leave earned income tax benefit of up to $3,500 over 12 weeks for workers with annual incomes below $28,000. Paid leave reform has support across the aisle鈥攁nd for good reason.
Providing paid sick time to employees reduces the spread of illness, increases productivity, and improves public health. Paid leave policies increase women鈥檚 labor force attachment and representation in the workforce, which in turn has measurable positive impacts on the GDP.
Paid leave offers important benefits to both employers and employees. Providing paid sick time to employees reduces the spread of illness, increases productivity, and improves public health. Paid leave policies and representation in the workforce, which in turn has positive impacts on the GDP. In fact, Cornell University economists attribute the lack of paid family leave and other 鈥渇amily-friendly鈥 policies to the in the last two decades compared to other advanced economies鈥撯揻rom 6th place to 17th place. Leave policies improve workplace environments by increasing employee retention, morale, and productivity. Research has likewise shown that there is considerable cost in failing to adopt paid leave policies, including a loss of talent (particularly female talent) due to high turnover rates, a loss of productivity in the workforce, and, in turn, substantial loss of economic activity鈥攁 loss valued at $500 billion annually, according to one estimate.
More than anything, paid leave policy provides people of all genders with the choice to work and care according to family and personal needs.
Guided by existing research, we propose that paid family leave policies鈥攁t the local, state, or federal level鈥攕hould:
More than anything, paid leave policy provides people of all genders with the choice to work and care according to family and personal needs.
All children, families, and caregivers deserve financial security to fulfill their , access , and and live a good life. In order to create a society where every person can flourish, we want to start thinking about how to provide a basic floor for wellbeing. Though supporting families can have important economic benefits, this is first and foremost a matter of justice and equity. The Care Index makes it clear that something big needs to change: our patchwork early care and learning system and the constant trade-offs between cost, quality and availability, is not serving families, children, the industry, businesses, nor the economy well. Experimenting with universal forms of cash assistance, such as a universal child benefit or a universal basic income, is a promising way to support families, invest in children, and value care.
In order to create a society where every person can flourish, we want to start thinking about how to provide a basic floor for wellbeing. Though supporting families can have important economic benefits, this is first and foremost a matter of justice and equity.
The evidence is clear: Raising a child is expensive. In total, raising a child born in 2013 from birth to age 18 (that is, not including college tuition) will cost $245,340 on average for a middle-income family, according to the USDA. Expenditures include housing, food, transportation, healthcare, and many other expenses鈥攁nd, of course, education and child care. Education and care are now among the largest costs for families, making up 18 percent of average child-related expenses, and often much more: The Care Index found that the average cost of child care in a center is nearly one-fifth of U.S. household median income. For lower-income families, these costs can become unbearable. The Care Index found that the cost of one child in center-based care could eat up nearly two-thirds of a minimum-wage earner鈥檚 income. And the rate of child poverty in the U.S. is high: One in five children live below the poverty line, and one in ten live in extreme poverty. For single-parent families earning minimum wage, the Care Index found that average cost of child care can eat up nearly two-thirds of their earnings. Child poverty can have including poor health, behavioral issues, and low earnings as adults鈥攂ut the flip side is that to low-income , which can help ensure that children receive high quality early education, can yield substantial and lasting .
Though the United States has some cash transfer policies in place to help families with children, including (TANF), the Child Tax Credit (CTC), and Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), these policies are nowhere near sufficient to meet families鈥 needs. Only actually receive TANF, and many are . For those families who do receive TANF, benefits are small: Payments vary by state, but, for a family of three with no other income, the median state maximum monthly payment is $427, or just over $5,000 per year. The CTC fails to reach the poorest families and nonworking families, since it is phased in gradually only once families have $3,000 in earned income and is not fully refundable. It also doesn鈥檛 help much with day-to-day budgeting, since it is distributed annually, and it is capped at $1,000 per child. The EITC is more substantial and is one of the U.S.鈥檚 more ; its maximum credit for a family with one child is $3,359. But it鈥檚 not enough鈥攖he Care Index found that cost of child care in centers eats about 18 percent of median household income nationwide. For families with a single earner making minimum wage, that鈥檚 64 percent of their income. 聽
A provides regular cash transfers to all families with children to help defray the costs of raising children for all families and lift children out of poverty. This type of benefit is already common in many European countries, with payments ranging from $1,779 per year in France to $8,750 in Luxembourg, for . Unlike existing U.S. programs like child care subsidies and Women, Infants, & Children (WIC) benefits, which restrict spending to specific needs, are flexible and allow parents to spend money according to personal family needs. (And research shows that parents who get cash transfers do actually spend the money to .) In contrast to the child tax credit and TANF, a child benefit has no work requirements and would help families all along the income spectrum鈥攖hough child poverty is a serious problem, , too, can struggle to cover expenses. It would also provide assistance to parents doing their own unpaid caregiving in lieu of paid work.
Another idea gaining traction鈥攚ith experiments planned in places ranging from the to to 鈥攊s universal basic income, or UBI. Though proposals vary, UBI usually involves equal cash payments to every person, regardless of circumstances (universal); enough to live on, if modestly, without income from other sources (basic); and paid out in regular installments (income).
Both child benefits and UBI are universal, so that children鈥檚 needs are addressed no matter what family they come from, and have no associated with them. However, whereas a child benefit is usually fairly small and specifically intended to offset the cost of raising a child, UBI has the broader goal of creating an income floor to prevent poverty, including child poverty. UBI can provide security for every member of a family鈥攃hildren as well as their caregivers.
of UBI make their with three main . The first is that UBI promotes justice, equity, and human rights. UBI is a way to set a minimum income, ensuring that no one is hungry or homeless. It would also eliminate the constant stress and cognitive drain of , thereby enabling people to develop their full capabilities. In other words, when people feel secure that their day-to-day needs will be provided for, they鈥檙e able to think long-term and outside of those basic needs, perhaps about pursuing education or looking for a good job. UBI would also change how we think about government assistance鈥攊nstead of marginalizing people who need help, as current attitudes and policies tend to do with welfare recipients, UBI assumes that everyone can benefit from stability and support. And UBI would make caregiving, whether full- or part-time, a viable and valued choice for far more people. Experimental data on UBI is limited, but the evidence that does exist shows significant health benefits and increased educational attainment for people receiving UBI. One study of a 1970s program found that young people stayed in school longer and new mothers spent more time at home with their babies (though other groups didn鈥檛 work less).
Second is the economic case that UBI would be cheaper and more efficient to administer (not to mention easier to navigate for recipients) than the existing patchwork of social safety net programs and tax expenditures. Most discussions focus on the short-term costs and benefits of for UBI, but the policy could also have long-term economic benefits such as better health, reduced crime rates, and increased educational attainment.
UBI would also change how we think about government assistance鈥攊nstead of marginalizing people who need help, as current attitudes and policies tend to do with welfare recipients, UBI assumes that everyone can benefit from stability and support.
Finally, UBI is a potential solution for a changing labor market and that for human labor. While such advances will likely make the economy as a whole more productive, they may also eliminate millions of mostly . UBI is a way of 鈥溾濃攖o ensure that everyone is able to get by in a changing economy.
What do the critics say? Those who criticize UBI on the grounds of social justice argue that like universal health care, affordable child care and college tuition, raising the minimum wage, and bolstering welfare benefits for low-income people are better and more realistically attainable ways of meeting basic human needs. They also point out that some groups, such as people with disabilities, may need specially targeted assistance, not just a universal benefit. Many also contend that UBI is to be feasible anytime soon, and that the existing welfare system isn鈥檛 as bad as we think. Another common fear (though largely unsupported by the evidence) is that UBI would and slow down economic growth. And some skeptics doubt that will actually , at least in the near future.
Despite the criticisms, we think UBI is an exciting proposal worth exploring and a potentially powerful way of supporting family and child wellbeing, especially as it relates to the cost of care (whether paid or unpaid). It鈥檚 also the rare policy that can bring together , , labor organizers, , and . Though we need more data and research on the impact of UBI, evidence suggests that it holds tremendous promise as a policy that could support people across society, including families with children, inclusively, comprehensively, and effectively.
Three inextricably linked challenges within our existing early education and care system emerged over the course of our research: the high cost of care for families, the impoverishment of caregivers, and the rocky transition to kindergarten for children. Integrating the care of three- and four-year-olds into the K-12 public school system is one way to address these issues.
Primary school usually and arbitrarily begins at age five in the United States, even though brain science shows that children are learning long before they enter the kindergarten classroom. High quality universal pre-K for three- and four-year-olds could significantly reduce the financial burden facing families with young children and help ensure that children are prepared for kindergarten. We recommend all three- and four-year-olds have access to optional, publicly-funded pre-K, as they do for kindergarten through twelfth grade, and that that pre-K be of a certain uniform standard for quality.
High quality universal pre-K for three- and four-year-olds could significantly reduce the financial burden facing families with young children and help ensure that children are prepared for kindergarten.
Why publicly funded? Because the price tag of high quality pre-K and child care keeps it out of reach for many families. The Care Index found that the average cost of care for a four-year-old in a center in Illinois is $10,414, about 19 percent of the median household income in the state, and 61 percent of the income earned by a single parent working for minimum wage. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services defines affordable child care as no more than 10 percent of a family鈥檚 income. Universal pre-K for three- and four-year-olds would save families thousands of dollars and improve their economic well being. Most children today grow up in households where all parents work outside of the home, making outside care a necessity. Tuition-free pre-K would reduce the burden placed on parents struggling to afford care for all hours of their work day.
According to the highly respected National Institute for Early Education Research鈥檚 (NIEER) most recent data, last year only 41 percent of four-year-olds and 16 percent of three-year-olds were served in some type of publicly funded pre-K program. The federal government has been providing pre-K to low-income three-and four-year-olds through the means-tested program for over 50 years. Head Start offers comprehensive services, including but not limited to high quality pre-K education, health and developmental screenings, parenting classes, connections to social services, and more. Head Start is the nation鈥檚 first and largest pre-K program. It reaches approximately one million children, but, due to limited funding, .
Another 1.4 million children are enrolled in state-funded pre-K programs. Many states and local governments have been expanding access to pre-K in recent years through a hodgepodge of public and private programs. However, there is great variation in how states prioritize early education. For example, West Virginia provides universal pre-K for four-year-olds and pre-K for three-year-olds with disabilities. Oklahoma鈥檚 well-known pre-K program serves about 75 percent of four-year-olds and no three-year-olds. Other states, like Washington, provide pre-K only to the state鈥檚 most vulnerable children. In contrast, a handful of states, such as New Hampshire and Montana, still do not have a state-funded pre-K program at all.
In some cases, local school districts have led the way for pre-K in their states and others have built on their state pre-K programs. , for instance, has a highly-regarded universal pre-K program that is much more expansive than the state鈥檚 program. The District of Columbia is another district to look to as an example鈥攖he district serves an impressive 86 percent of four-year-olds and 64 percent of three-year-olds in public pre-K. While access to programs nationally varies significantly based on a family鈥檚 zip code, the quality of programs varies even more.
But it shouldn鈥檛. Low quality pre-K and child care programs fail to adequately prepare children for kindergarten, and when children begin kindergarten behind it is difficult to catch up. It鈥檚 no secret that our public education system is failing a significant portion of our students鈥攁ccording to the , only about one-third of American children can read proficiently by fourth grade. has revealed time and again that access to high quality pre-K benefits children in school and later in life. Children who attend not only perform better in kindergarten, but are also less likely to be placed in special education, less likely to repeat a grade, more likely to graduate from high school, and even less likely to commit crimes. While universal pre-K can benefit all children, it has the on those from low-income and minority families as well as dual language learners who are most likely to begin school already behind their more advantaged peers.
In addition to improving access for families and outcomes for children, universal pre-K has the potential to alleviate other issues plaguing our current early education and care system. One of the largest challenges to providing quality care is the low compensation of caregivers. While public funding for pre-K programs does not guarantee higher wages for pre-K teachers, it could be a step in the right direction. Currently, teachers and caregivers who work in publicly funded settings, particularly school-sponsored or public pre-K, earn higher wages than those working in other settings (see graph below). A handful of states require pay parity for pre-K and K-12 teachers if the program is located in a public school. Paying pre-K teachers a living wage is essential to sustaining a high quality program.
The Obama administration has made a large push for expanding pre-K. The President鈥檚 proposed Preschool for All initiative would provide pre-K to four-year-olds in all low- and middle-income families through a combination of state and federal dollars. While Preschool for All did not and will not become a reality under this administration, President Obama did encourage and assist states in expanding and improving their pre-K programs through other means. The competitive four-year Race to the Top: Early Learning Challenge grants allocated $1 billion to helping states develop their birth to five early learning systems. The competitive four-year Preschool Development Grants specifically help states develop infrastructure and expand seats for four-year-olds as well as improve the quality of pre-K offerings. Finally, the newly authorized K-12 education law, the Every Student Succeeds Act, includes language encouraging more coordination between pre-K and K-12 to improve transitions for children.
Teachers are the key to a high quality program and they need to receive training, feedback, support, and compensation that鈥檚 comparable to K-12 teachers to best serve their students.
There is no one right way for policymakers to 聽develop a high quality pre-K program. However, there are certain criteria that research has shown are associated with stronger child outcomes. The National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) has identified 10 quality benchmarks as a baseline for building high quality pre-K programs:
To meet these benchmarks does not guarantee that a program will provide high quality services to children, but it does constitute a step in the right direction. The ideal universal pre-K program, though, would exceed NIEER鈥檚 benchmarks. Researchers still do not have all the answers on what matters most in program quality (and neither do we, but click here for more information on measuring quality. Perhaps the most important indicator of quality, which is not included in NIEER鈥檚 list, is the nature of the interactions between adults and children in the classroom. Children need to form relationships with their teachers and caregivers to foster both academic and social-emotional development, but many caregivers do not receive the appropriate training or preparation in early childhood education and development and thus do not always engage children in the most developmentally appropriate way. These teacher-child interactions are more difficult to measure than teacher credentials or class size, which can be a barrier to reform. Teachers are the key to a high quality program and they need to receive training, feedback, support, and compensation that鈥檚 comparable to K-12 teachers to best serve their students.
While pre-K can and does take many different forms throughout the United States, we propose that publicly funded pre-K should ideally include the following components in addition to meeting NIEER鈥檚 current baseline benchmarks of quality:
There has been progress in expanding access to pre-K and improving program quality in recent years, as well as strong public support for doing so. But in most of the country we still have a far way to go before we can provide all children with the kind of high quality early education that they deserve.
Dual language learners鈥攃hildren between the ages of 0-8 who are in the process of learning English while still learning their home language鈥攔epresent a large and in the United States. Nearly thirty percent of children enrolled in Head Start are DLLs, as are an estimated 23 percent of three- and four-year-olds in the United States. Research suggests that high-quality early childhood education is particularly beneficial for DLLs鈥 , , and . Early childhood education provides young dual language learners with early exposure to the English language, access to a rich literacy environment, and opportunities to develop their language skills through conversation and play with peers and teachers.
Research from the Care Index has demonstrated relationships and trade-offs between the cost, quality, and availability of care, and that no state is providing all three.
Research from the Care Index has demonstrated relationships and trade-offs between the cost, quality, and availability of care, and that no state is providing all three. Further, the importance of early care and learning for DLLs was highlighted in 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 analysis and in-depth report on those trade-offs in four states. in Georgia, which has funded a universal pre-K program for nearly 25 years, have found that while children from all backgrounds benefit from the program, those who don鈥檛 speak English at home begin the year with lower skills than their English-speaking peers, but learn at a faster rate and make large gains throughout the year. And those gains tend to continue beyond the pre-K program. Yet the challenges families face accessing care are compounded by cultural and linguistic barriers, especially as dual language learners become an increasing portion of the population.
Moving forward, parents, educators, and policymakers need to consider the unique needs of these children and families, and how to incorporate them into the early learning environment. The following factors should be considered in the construction of a robust care infrastructure for DLL children:
Many DLL children participate in formal child care and high-quality early education programs at than their non-DLL peers. One 2014 study found that Hispanic children, DLLs and children with an immigrant background each had lower rates of participation in either center-based or Head Start pre-K programs than their White and Asian peers. 麻豆果冻传媒 50 percent of each of these subgroups of children were not enrolled in pre-K鈥攃ompared with about 30 percent of White and Asian children. Additionally, research shows that the preschool enrollment of Latino children also lags behind that of African-American children. The educational opportunities and outcomes for DLLs in immigrant households鈥攁 group that researchers Michael Gottfried and Hui Yon Kim define as 鈥渇irst generation children born outside of the U.S. or second-generation children of foreign-born parents鈥濃攁re often shaped by 鈥渞isk factors,鈥 including lower socioeconomic status, levels of parental education, and English proficiency. Similarly, Lynn Karoly and Gabriella Gonzalez suggest in a 2011 article that immigrant families face multiple barriers accessing high-quality early care including affordability, language, and informational gaps that make it difficult for immigrant families to know about all available options.
Educators, administrators, and policymakers can work with families to lower these barriers and build bridges to increase access to early care. This includes creating bilingual early education programs that support families鈥 native languages and acquisition of English. Several studies document the to enroll their children in where providers speak the child鈥檚 first language to help and facilitate easier communication between providers and families.
Educators, administrators, and policymakers can work with families to lower these barriers and build bridges to increase access to early care. This includes creating bilingual early education programs that support families鈥 native languages and acquisition of English.
Programs can address informational gaps by partnering with community-based organizations that work closely with immigrant families. In New York鈥檚 Onondaga County, the to help increase 聽access and (by extension) enrollment for refugee families. Specifically, Head Start coordinated cross-agency trainings, held intake and enrollment sessions at resettlement agencies, and created an online case management database to share with those agencies. Localities can also create designated offices for enrolling in programs and dedicated staff to work with immigrant families. In Harrisonburg, Virginia, the local school district has a Welcome Center where all language minority families receive assistance enrolling their child in pre-K programs from multilingual staff. The district also employs multilingual home-school liaisons who help DLLs and their families navigate the school system and provide necessary interpretation and translation support.
However, simply increasing DLLs鈥 access to these programs is not enough. Dual language learners have unique linguistic and academic needs that must be considered in the design and provision of early care and education so that they reap the maximum benefits from these experiences. Consensus is building among researchers and practitioners regarding the essential elements of in the . These include:
The newly adopted Head Start Performance Standards include many of these elements. These quality guidelines could provide a national model for other early childhood programs. When implemented, the will mean programs will need to recognize bilingualism as an asset, implement 鈥渞esearch-based鈥 instruction that encourages its development, and assess DLLs鈥 language development in their native languages and English. The standards suggest that infant and toddler programs focus heavily on development of the home language. Research shows that and that 鈥渢heir language growth is directly related to the quality and quantity of speech they hear in each language.鈥 That means that hearing lots of English only predicts growth in their English language development and not in their second language. Bilingual infants鈥 vocabulary size and through 鈥渇requent, high-quality, social interactions with native speakers.鈥 And importantly, continued use of the home language does not interfere with a DLL child鈥檚 acquisition of English.
States should also include components of home language development as a normative part of the early education experience for young children who are DLLs.
Additionally, the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services and Education鈥檚 recent policy statement on DLLs recommends that states revisit their Early Learning Guidelines to check their appropriateness for DLLs: 鈥淪tates should consider ELGs that include specific guidelines for language development in both English and children鈥檚 home language. States should also include components of home language development as a normative part of the early education experience for young children who are DLLs.鈥
These changes and recommendations could have significant implications for the preparation and professional development of the early childhood education and care (ECEC) workforce. One clear implication is the need for increased professional development opportunities for teachers and providers. Fresno, California, where 34 percent of kindergartners are DLLs, provides a strong example of how community collaboration can be leveraged to increase teachers鈥 professional growth. With the support of the Early Learning Lab and Packard Foundation, early care educators and providers from the local school district, Head Start, Early Head Start, and family-care are brought together for geared towards sharing best practices for DLLs. This training includes many of the instructional approaches emphasized by researchers in the field including support of the home language, strategies for family engagement and enhancing language development.
Another pressing implication is the need for more bilingual teachers and staff to work with DLLs and their families. A 2015 indicates that 鈥渓ess than one-quarter of the ECEC workforce speaks a language other than English鈥 and that a large share of these multilingual workers are immigrants. Additionally, multilingual immigrant ECEC workers have lower levels of education and primarily work in home-based, family-based, or center-based settings due to a lack of credentials to work in other settings. As the 鈥渢hese and new workers will likely need assistance in gaining advanced training and credentials in order of the field to retain and build its linguistic and cultural competency skills.鈥
In order to quantify what can be an emotional and complicated experience for families, the Care Index measures three variables: cost, quality, and availability. Together, these pillars of care provide a picture of whether and how families are able to access the early care and learning system in each state.
In addition to measuring these pillars individually, we combined the three to provide a rank for each state鈥檚 overall landscape of care. However, because we are aware of the limitations of our data, we divided the states into quartiles rather than absolute rankings. For each quartile, we chose one state for further in-depth reporting to highlight any details our data might not fully capture: Massachusetts (1), Georgia (2), Illinois (3), and New Mexico (4).
The Care Index is a data and methodology collaboration between 麻豆果冻传媒, Care.com and others.
Why, in 2016, haven鈥檛 we achieved full gender parity around the world? Why has the women鈥檚 movement stalled here and abroad? One big reason: We鈥檝e been teaching both women and men that 2 a.m. work emails are more valuable than 2 a.m. diaper changes鈥攁nd that getting to the C-Suite is a more prestigious goal than teaching toddlers their ABCs. In other words, we鈥檝e devalued care work鈥攂oth paid and unpaid鈥攚ith devastating consequences for women, men, families, and economic growth.
麻豆果冻传媒, Care.com, and other partners are coming together to elevate and re-frame the conversation around care by producing a first-of-its-kind Care Index that examines the cost, quality, and availability of child care across the United States. Though other organizations have gathered data on some of these indicators, our index will be the first to combine the three, providing a snapshot of the care landscape across the country.
Care鈥攍ike water, electricity and roads鈥攊s part of the infrastructure that enables all other work. And yet, we continue to pay care workers salaries equivalent to fast food employees鈥攁nd to stigmatize individuals who leave the formal labor force to support their children or aging parents. Women still spend disproportionately more time on unpaid care work at home, often dropping out of the paid labor force to do so, while men are facing increasing levels of work-family balance anxieties. It doesn鈥檛 help that care work has historically been viewed as 鈥渨omen鈥檚 work,鈥 and thus inherently unmanly.
Decades of devaluing care work has produced a grim landscape: a dearth of policy supports for, public investment in, and cultural acceptance of combining caregiving and breadwinning鈥攆or all genders. Simply put, there is not enough affordable, accessible, and quality care for those who need it. And that鈥檚 hurting us all.
The bottom line is this: We will all, at some point, need care or give care. It is not simply a women鈥檚 issue. Beyond amplifying the conversation around valuing, respecting, and elevating care work here and abroad, we have three goals for impact:
The Index draws on unique proprietary data from Care.com1 as well as publicly available data from other organizations including the U.S. Census Bureau, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), and the National Association for Family Child Care (NAFCC) from 2015. (In order to provide a consistent snapshot of paid child care arrangements across the course of the year (school-year and non-school year), all data are taken from the full 2015 calendar year.) A new Care.com survey, conducted in October, 2015 by Hanover Research (a market research company), using an online panel maintained by ResearchNow (a digital data collection company), with design input from 麻豆果冻传媒, provides additional data on paid child care arrangements in each state with a sample of households with children.2 Survey questions include detailed information about the primary childcare arrangement for each child, time to find a caregiver, and reasons for changing child care providers. We use the index as exploratory research to identify key child care challenges and take a deeper look into what’s happening on the ground.
Critically, the index and the 麻豆果冻传媒 Care Report translate what can be an emotional story for families into a narrative grounded in facts, data, and both quantitative analysis and qualitative storytelling鈥攂ridging the personal and the political. Data allows us to tell the stories of care in ways that we hope will resonate with and appeal to broader audiences, expanding the constituency who understand and are committed to this issue.
Each of the components of the Care Index brings new data to bear on the questions that most concern families when it comes to child care鈥攃ost, quality, and availability. The three components are combined into an overall Care Index and grouped in quartiles. By looking at quartiles within the index, and pulling out stories from four states鈥擭ew Mexico, Illinois, Georgia, and Massachusetts鈥攚e give voice to shared challenges and opportunities in care.
Cost聽is an important factor for families when considering child care options, yet there are few resources that allow for state-level comparisons of the complete cost of child care to families. (There is potentially a relationship between cost and availability we are unable to address in this iteration of the index.)聽The Care Index brings together data on the cost to families of in-home care (i.e. nanny-care), family child care homes, and center-based care, and takes into account tax credits (state and federal) for child care to develop a window into the out-of-pocket price for families in each state.
Child care costs can vary significantly by the age of the child. Cost metrics were calculated for infants (ages 0-1 year), toddlers (1-3 years), and preschoolers (3-5) for comparison in the Care Index. The average household cost for one child was used in the Care Index calculation. Cost data for in-home care came from Care.com hourly rates offered in jobs posted by families seeking full-time child care. Child care center rates were drawn from rate cards submitted by child care centers on Care.com. (Child care centers voluntarily submit (cost) rate information to be posted on their Care.com profile. In 2015, more than 14,000 child care centers, and 4,000 family child care homes had provided weekly rate information listed on Care.com.)聽Since we are primarily interested in comparing cost rather than hours used, the Care Index is based on a benchmark of 40 hours per week of care for 52 weeks for one child. The actual amount of time spent in paid child care varies across families depending on their needs, and may be more or less than 40 hours per week. The percentage of children in each type of care was calculated for each state using new (2015) survey data collected by Care.com. Since the impact of child care costs on a family depends on household income, the cost was normalized using U.S. Census, state-level data on median household income.3聽To test the accuracy of the cost data, we compared the state-level cost data to the state-level cost data compiled by Child Care Aware of America in their 2015 survey of Child Care Resource and Referral State Networks.
The equation below calculates the cost component of the child care index for state i with the following:
This equation gives the expected cost of childcare as a percentage of median household income for each state. Ultimately, this shows us where families are spending more out-of-pocket to cover child care expenses.
Quality聽child care provides the building blocks for healthy, happy kids and prepares them to succeed in school and beyond. However, it can be difficult to compare and measure the quality of different types of child care. There is no single child care quality metric with universal acceptance among child care researchers. The quality component of the Care Index combines quality data for in-home child care providers (nannies), family providers, and child care centers. (State licensing and monitoring requirements are not taken into consideration, as they are not consistent across states, primarily cover health and safety, not educational quality and are thus not reliable measures of quality that we can compare across states).
For in-home child care providers, the data comes from parent reviews of caregivers on Care.com. Reviews include both qualitative comments and a score on a scale from 1 to 5.
Q1i = average child care provider rating (out of 5 stars)
This refers to child care providers who come to the home of the child, such as nannies. In some studies (such as the ), researchers have observed interactions with caregivers in the home, which is probably the ideal way to measure quality. However, these studies are not large enough to compare across all 50 states. One of the advantages of reviews is that they are an evaluation of performance rather than just a characteristic of the individual. While ratings are subjective evaluations, it is probably the best currently available measure of quality for in-home care across all 50 states. The main source of bias is that people tend to submit reviews when they are passionate (positively or negatively) about a caregiver, but assuming that is true across all states, then the differences across states reveal different opinions about the quality of nanny care.
For family providers, quality is measured as the percentage of family homes in a state accredited by the (NAFCC). NAFCC is the leading accrediting organization for family child care homes. Standards cover the following categories: Relationships, The Environment, Developmental Learning Activities, Safety and Health, and Professional Business Practices.
Q2i = percentage of family providers in a state with NAFCC accreditation
For child care centers, quality is measured as the percentage of centers in a state that are accredited by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC). NAEYC is the leading accreditation organization for child care centers. Standards cover the following categories: Relationships, Curriculum, Creating Caring Communities for Learning, Assessment of Child Progress, Health, Preparation and Skills of Teaching Staff, Families, Community Relationships, Physical Environment, Leadership and Management.
Q3i = percentage of child care centers in a state with NAEYC accreditation
The quality metrics for in-home child care providers and child care centers are not directly comparable, so these were scaled separately using a Z-score before being combined. As in the cost equation, the provider metrics were multiplied by the percentage of survey respondents who use each type of care (in-home child care or child care center).
The quality index compares the quality of paid child care options across states using summary variables that are comparable at the state level and represent the best proxies for quality available. It is important to note that we use accreditation as a proxy for quality. We chose NAFCC and NAEYC as standardized observational measures of child-teacher interactions across the states. Furthermore, accreditation is used here as the minimum expectation or valuation of quality. We went back and forth on how to measure quality, and particularly in-home (nanny) care, and, in settling upon accreditation, want to be transparent that it is an imperfect measure and that there is currently no standard, universally accepted measure of quality.
Conclusions may only be drawn for those who are accredited. Those that are not accredited may not be for one of three reasons:
Varying accreditation rates may be due to any of the following reasons:
For more information, please see our brief on quality in early education.
Together, the three components of the Care Index offers new ways to understand the child care landscape across the United States. Each component of the Care Index was given equal weight when ranking states.
We decided to use a Z-transform, which measures how far each state is from the mean. For all three normalized measures, a value of 100 indicates the state is at the mean. Each 15 points above or below 100 indicates one standard deviation above or below the mean.
Given that this research is exploratory, and the ranking a rough estimate, the ranking is then broken up into quartiles so that common experiences, challenges, and bright spots can be identified. Four states have been selected for in-depth reporting and analysis based on the following criteria:
The states are as follows: Massachusetts (1), Georgia (2), Illinois (3), and New Mexico (4). View the index here.
The third pillar of the Care Index is availability. Even if child care costs are low enough to be affordable for parents, and teachers trained and paid enough for the quality to be high, the lack of child care providers can be a major cause for concern. Accurately capturing the number of early care and learning workers in the current patchwork system is difficult. Care.com has unique data that can help answer questions about the availability of in-home care based on the number of active child care provider profiles on their site, including those both employed and those looking to be employed. (The U.S. Census does not track informal in-home workers. This project is one of the few that can address this important part of the child care workforce.)聽For child care centers, data on availability comes from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), which tracks the number of child care providers employed in day care centers. The U.S. Census employment data is based on the NAICS code 624410 for Child Day Care Services, which does not track pre-K teachers, including Head Start teachers, in public schools.
In order to understand availability of child care in relation to the demand for child care, each metric is calculated as a ratio of the number of child care providers to children under 5, as measured by the U.S. Census Bureau. This Index focuses on care for ages 0<5 for two reasons. First, this is an age group for whom access to learning is not currently provided by the state (i.e. prior to kindergarten-age). As a result, the time and monetary provision of early care and learning is left largely to families. This is also the age group sampled in the American Community Survey of the U.S. Census Bureau.
It鈥檚 entirely possible that someone who鈥檚 working for a child care center also has an individual profile on Care.com. Unfortunately, there is no easy way for us to estimate that overlap. The employee count data for daycares does not have individual level data that we could check against Care.com data. However, as long as the overlap % is not dramatically different by state, this should not impact our availability entry for the index. We are normalizing the entries, so assuming the double-counting factor is fairly similar across states, the overlap won鈥檛 have a major impact the outcome.
The implicit assumption of this project is that all children need care and an environment in which they can develop cognitive, linguistic, and socio-emotional skills. By counting all children, we are attempting to acknowledge the care work that is done by parents (in the broadest sense) but undervalued and unpaid. Care work isn’t traditionally valued or paid but should be, irrespective of who is doing it.
The equation below calculates the availability for each state i using the following:
By combining individual providers and child care centers, the availability index considers the number of paid child care options relative to the number of children under 5 by state. However, measuring state-level data is imprecise, as care may be more readily available in urban centers or in certain geographic areas, particularly those with more working parents or more resources. Thus, the metric more accurately captures broad coverage rates of care. Better geographic data, more accurately pinpointing child care demand with supply and identifying child care 鈥渄eserts鈥 is needed. The state of Georgia and the city of Philadelphia have begun this more precise geographic availability mapping.
This index is meant as an exploratory project, broadly mapping the landscape of child care, and highlighting where additional data is needed. We need to capture the invisible economy of unpaid and unregulated care for cost, develop standardized and reliable measures for quality, and conduct more research on the complex factors affecting care fit and accessibility considering geography, age of child, the match between parent work hours and hours care is available, and other metrics for a clearer picture of availability. Only then will we truly see the full picture of the challenges of the care infrastructure in America, which will give policymakers the best tools to begin to fix it.
The Care Index is a data and methodology collaboration between 麻豆果冻传媒, Care.com and others.
We would like to thank Care.com and A.T. Kearney for their generous support of this important research. Thank you to the numerous organizations and individuals who provided thoughtful contributions and reviews for this report. The conclusions reached in the 麻豆果冻传媒 Care Report are those of the authors alone. We鈥檇 especially like to thank