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Yahoo
2 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Child care costs as much as college. Here is what you need to know about fixes.
You might have heard that child care costs as much as college. Parents face big bills, long wait lists and a shortage of quality providers. At the same time, many child care providers say without assistance, they will be forced to close their doors. One of the biggest hurdles is finding qualified workers in an industry with low wages. For a first-hand perspective, the Ideas Lab's Kristin Brey talked with four early childhood education ambassadors from Milwaukee Succeeds, an organization connected with the Greater Milwaukee Foundation that focuses on early childhood education and high school success. The interviews (available in the video play list above and links below) include conversations with: Jackie Burrell, a former child care provider, educator and parent. She also serves on the Board of Commissioners for Housing Authority of the City of Milwaukee; is the Westlawn Resident Council President; and is Foster Care to Adopt lead. See her interview. LaDonna Foster, a former child care educator and parent. She is also the lead coordinator and board member at Westlawn Resident Council. See her interview. Taffie Foster-Toney, lead case manager for Wisconsin Community Service and Driver's License Recovery and Employability program. See her interview. Vanessa Giraldez, current early childhood education parent and lead service navigator at the National Alliance on Mental Illness and program coordinator for the Lighthouse Project. See her interview. The future of proposed funding to support Wisconsin's struggling child care industry is in doubt after state budget negotiations between Gov. Tony Evers and legislative leaders collapsed June 4. Evers, a Democrat, proposed spending $480 million on Child Care Counts, a program that directs federal pandemic relief funding to child care providers across Wisconsin. Providers use the money to increase staff wages, to offset the cost of physical operating expenses like rent and utilities, to increase the quality of their programming and to prevent large tuition hikes. With the pandemic funding expected to run out this summer, Evers is asking for $480 million over the next two years to continue the program. It's unclear how much, if any, Republicans, who control the legislature, will support in their budget bill. The state's new two-year budget begins July 1. If the governor and legislature don't agree on a budget, spending will continue at current levels. How does Wisconsin compare to other states in responding to child care struggles? Here are solutions from two states highlighted by Milwaukee Succeeds: New Mexico: Voters passed a constitutional amendment dedicating 1.25% of state land trust revenue to early childhood education. In addition, the state now offers child care assistance to families earning up to 400% of the federal poverty level and has waived all family copayments. New Mexico is leading on both sustainable funding and affordability, ensuring families don't face out-of-reach child care costs while creating long-term stability for providers. Vermont: Lawmakers passed legislation that funds scholarships and loan repayment for early childhood education workers, expands family subsidies, upgrades the IT system, and sets equity-driven goals: no family should pay more than 10% of income, and providers should be fairly paid. Vermont is treating child care as public infrastructure, investing in both access and workforce quality while building a system that can meet long-term needs. The Wisconsin Policy Forum's recent budget brief for Wisconsin includes a table outlining policy options from other states. Jim Fitzhenry is the Ideas Lab Editor/Director of Community Engagement for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Reach him at jfitzhen@ or 920-993-7154. Kristin Brey is the "My Take" columnist for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: WI lawmakers must be part of solution for child care woes | Opinion
Yahoo
16-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Child care is in crisis. High costs hurt parents and providers.
Early childhood education is a game-changer. It's a springboard to lifelong success for kids. It's a necessity for many parents to participate in the workforce and a lifeline to businesses who depend on a robust talent pool. However, despite its well-documented benefits for families, employers and the economy, child care is in crisis. With costs rising, availability shrinking and state support limited, the child care market in Wisconsin's urban, suburban and rural areas alike is unable to meet the demand, leaving communities in dire circumstances. Our children and our state's future deserve solutions that deliver on the promise offered by access to affordable, high-quality early education. Here are three things we could do in the Badger State to turn the tide: Identify new sources of funding to help stabilize early childhood education providers and prevent devastating closures. Stabilizing this essential industry requires a consistent source of financial resources. Securing new sources of funding would minimize provider closures, ensuring families can remain in the workforce, keeping the state's communities and economy growing. Supply is not meeting demand. Razor-thin margins and severe staffing shortages have significantly reduced the availability of care. More than 50% of the state and 70% of rural areas have just one licensed child care slot for every three children under age 5. More than 34,000 infants and toddlers in the state lack access to safe, regulated care, and waitlists in rural Wisconsin for families who need care exceed 25,500 spots. Circumstances will not improve on their own. Recently, 663 Milwaukee child care providers surveyed by Milwaukee Succeeds, the Greater Milwaukee Foundation's strategic education initiative, indicated the vast majority of pandemic relief funds they received have been used for basic operating costs like rent, food, utilities and supplies. Inflation is pressuring budgets even further, and at least 15% of providers surveyed said they expect to close when emergency funding expires in June. As we speak, other states are pursuing innovative options for getting more public and private funding into the sector. Retaining a dated, dysfunctional model for funding child care carries a high risk for harming Wisconsin children, families and employers. Opinion: Changes to Social Security would cost average Wisconsin resident $7,000 a year Strengthen Wisconsin Shares subsidies for lower income, working families so more households can afford care. Wisconsin Shares is a worthwhile program with the potential to have much greater impact if it covered more child care slots, reduced co-payments for families, increased eligibility to reach more families and simplified the application process. Opinion: Musk, billionaires took over Wisconsin Supreme Court race. The joke is on us. The expense of child care puts it out of reach for too many who need it. Families with one infant, for example, pay $11,900 per year on average at a child care center. And programs designed to help those with lower incomes aren't helping enough. Families in Wisconsin pay the highest co-payments on child care subsidies in the country – up to 17% of their household income for a family of three. You'll find co-pays of 5% and 5.7% in Minnesota and Michigan respectively. Challenges accessing Wisconsin Shares also leads to underutilization. Only 18 percent of eligible children are enrolled in the subsidy program. We need to expand the access, grow the resources, and then better connect people to them. Advance policies that increase compensation for early educators to reduce high rates of staff turnover. The staggering rates of turnover experienced in the child care sector could be mitigated if educators received dignified, livable pay commensurate with their training and experience. Even though early education teachers are entrusted to nurture our youngest learners during critical stages of development, lack of investment in the sector has depressed their wages to poverty levels. At a time when the cost of living is rising rapidly, early educators are earning an average of $12.99 per hour, predictably leading to low recruitment and retention rates. Wisconsin providers report they are under capacity by 33,000 children – meaning low staffing levels caused classrooms closures, reducing the number of children served compared to the number they could have otherwise served. Simply put, a living wage leads to more consistent staffing, which in turn means greater access to care for families. Early childhood education's challenges all point to a flawed business model where parents can't afford care, providers can't afford staff and rising operational costs, and staff can't afford to stay in the profession. Meanwhile, Wisconsin businesses suffer as current and potential employees opt out of the workforce in the absence of quality child care. This is a systems issue, so systems solutions are needed. And while one person cannot enact such change on their own, our voices are powerful together. Lawmakers in Madison are currently debating the state budget, and your opportunity to be heard is now. We encourage you to contact your state representatives and senators to educate them on the importance of early childhood education for Wisconsin's children and families, our economy and our future. Let them know that these three things could make all the difference. ➤Want to state legislator? Here's where you can find your representatives. Gregory M. Wesley, JD, is president and CEO of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation. JoAnne Anton is president and CEO of Herb Kohl Philanthropies. Vincent Lyles is the executive director of Milwaukee Succeeds. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Wisconsin daycare is expensive and scarce. We must act now | Opinion