My day care was my lifeline, and I was bereft when it closed. Thousands of Pa. families are facing the same fate.

This week, we will reach the edge of the so-called childcare cliff, when the pandemic-driven infusion of federal funds to save the childcare industry runs out. An estimated one in three childcare programs in the country — or 70,000 — may have to close their doors.

In Pennsylvania alone, nearly 3,000 programs are set to shut down, leaving 150,000 kids with nowhere to go. For many families, this may not be a big deal — they make a few calls, find another nearby place that has space for a new child, and after an adjustment period, everyone settles in to a new routine.

Previous
Previous

When should parents sign up for child care amid staffing shortages? Right away.

Next
Next

'A child care crisis': Care for kids in Lehigh Valley at risk if federal funding expires