News, Op-eds, Advisories, and Releases
New Survey: Sunsetting Pandemic Relief for Pennsylvania Child Care Sector will Raise Tuition for Working Families
HARRISBURG (December 15, 2022) – According to a new poll from the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), 62% of Pennsylvania child care center directors surveyed reported that they will have to raise tuition as one-time federal pandemic relief comes to an end. Additionally, 29% reported they will have to cut staff salaries, as they will be unable to sustain the increases the federal funds allowed them to offer. This is bad news for working families in Pennsylvania who are struggling to find and afford child care.
Working families need more child care, at a cost they can afford
By Kate Rothstein
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
This November we have a choice. We must elect state and federal candidates who prioritize stabilizing child care and the needs of working families and value the work of early childhood educators. By voting for candidates who will invest in child care, we make an important choice for our young children, working families, and the future of our economy.
Delaware County child care facility part of wider discussion of problems in that business in southeast Pa.
By Rachel Ravina
The Delaware County Daily Times
Participants of the “Recovering from the Pandemic: The Role of Child Care” roundtable inside the Willow School, an early childhood education center in Norristown, shared how the COVID-19 pandemic focused a light on the need for services and the struggles that child care centers still face.
2022-23 State Budget: Growth for Pre-k, Child Care and Home Visitation
HARRISBURG, PA (July 8, 2022) – Today, the principal partners of Early Learning Pennsylvania (ELPA), a statewide coalition of advocates focused on supporting young Pennsylvanians from birth to age five, issued the following statements regarding the final 2022-23 Pennsylvania state budget. ELPA operates four issue-based advocacy campaigns: Pre-K for PA, Start Strong PA, Childhood Begins at Home and Thriving PA.
Without state help, Pennsylvania faces a child care crisis
By Marci Lesko
The Morning Call
Working parents rely on affordable and accessible child care to stay in the workforce. Unfortunately, there is a national crisis because child care programs are unable to recruit or retain quality teachers. That staff shortage is forcing classrooms and facilities to close, limiting critical child care access.
Pennsylvania child care workers push for more state funding
By Madison Montag
abc27 WHTM
HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) — On June 21, members of the child care industry made their case at the Pennsylvania capitol for more state funding. A statewide survey showed that nine out of ten child care programs are facing staffing shortages; This is caused approximately 1,600 child care programs to close during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Danville child care workers advocate higher pay
By Marshall Keely
abc16 WNEP
DANVILLE, Pa. — A child's early years are critical when it comes to long-term academic and social success, but a severe shortage of child development professionals is putting kids in jeopardy. It's happening all over the country.
Citing workforce crisis, advocates ask state to help raise child care wages
By Kate Giammarise
90.5 WSEA
The people who care for Pennsylvania’s youngest kids are paid so little, advocates say it’s creating an industry crisis – one with reverberations across the economy.
A coalition of Pennsylvania child care and family advocacy organizations is asking state lawmakers to do something about it. They argue that low wages – and public attitudes that undervalue child care work – harm educators, families and the overall economy, which depends on accessible and affordable child care options.
Gov. Wolf Announces $98M Grant Opportunity Investing in Child Care Workforce Recruitment and Retention
Human Services Press Release
HARRISBURG (May 16, 2022) Governor Tom Wolf today announced a $98 million grant opportunity for certified child care providers to support workforce recruitment and retention. Funded by American Rescue Plan Act funding received specifically for child care providers and their critical workforce, this funding can support providers seeking to recognize staff dedication through retention bonuses and can assist with personnel development and recruitment.
More than 20 Philly child-care centers go on strike, pushing for better wages and more affordable care
By Ximena Conde
The Philadelphia Inquirer
As someone who works in the child-care industry herself, Brooks is familiar with what providers are calling a crisis decades in the making. With tight profit margins, workers are making too little and centers are struggling to recruit and keep hires. Meanwhile, families describe spending a significant portion of their income on care for their children.
Poconos | High-Quality, Affordable Childcare Needed For Working Families
By Michael Tukeva
Stroudsburg Herald
The COVID-19 Pandemic Report Survey from the Early Learning Investment Commission and the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry that surveyed businesses about their workforce found that 54% of employers lost employees due to a lack of childcare.
Wyomissing child care center says help is needed to address staffing shortages
By David Mekeel
Reading Eagle
Learning Ladder is serving 111 kids but could be serving many more, manager Steven Goodhart told [Senator] Schwank. The center is licensed for up to 179 kids. But because of staffing shortages, families find themselves faced with waitlists when trying to sign up for care.
Lancaster County child care providers face a workforce crisis
By Lisa Scheid
Lancaster Online
The pandemic has exacerbated the lack of staff in a profession made up of mostly women. Low wages (in Lancaster County the median wage is $11 an hour) and lack of benefits are not new in child care, a workforce in the United States that has been trying to be treated and seen as professionals for decades.
Child care centers having difficulty keeping staff
By Mark Hiller
PA Live! Luzerne Local News
It’s no secret, early childhood centers are struggling to maintain and hire staff. Eyewitness News said on Wednesday how staffing at some centers has reached the crisis level.
Eyewitness news focuses on an effort to beef up the staff and help more families in need of childcare.
Increase in child care costs affecting local parents and daycares
By Fontaine Glenn
WJET/YourErie.com
What is becoming a national problem is happening right here in our area. The cost for child care centers has jumped nearly 50% during the pandemic and it’s having a huge affect on parents and local child care centers.
It’s no secret that finding child care is difficult, especially now in the midst of a pandemic. Not only is it hard for the child care centers, but also for the parents.
The residential child care’s dilemma: lose income or potentially expose families to coronavirus?
By Miles Bryan
WHYY
….as child care providers across Pennsylvania closed their doors in response to Gov. Tom Wolf’s shutdown order last month, Godboldt, 37, had one big question on her mind — what should I do?
Child Care Providers Worry They May Never Reopen
By Lillian Mongeau
The Hechinger Report / USA TODAY
Dominated by small businesses, the country’s child care “system” has long been at a breaking point. Child care is expensive to operate and to provide, yet families are largely left to pay for it themselves while providers eke out a living on meager profits.
To make it through coronavirus-era closures and the economic downturn, providers say they need help.
PA child care providers dealing with ‘a lot of really, really sleepless nights and hard decisions’
By Ed Mahon
PA Post
Child care providers across Pennsylvania face a choice in response to the state’s efforts to halt the spread of the coronavirus: Close their doors, or seek permission to stay open.
Both options present risks.
Child care sector facing ‘potential collapse’ without new policies
By Bill Hangley
WHYY
Centers typically rely on multiple funding streams, including government payments to families and providers in low-income areas, as well as unsubsidized “private pay” customers, most of whom have been told to stay home from work.
With those private-pay dollars draining away, providers could easily be forced to close their doors if the shutdown grows lengthy, Cooper said.
Paid Child Care for Working Mothers? All It Took Was a World War
By Linda Kiesling
The New York Times
I am typing this from inside an indoor playground in Portland. We are new to town, it’s the tail end of summer and my 4-year-old daughter can’t start her new preschool until next week. It’s also raining, and our house is full of boxes.