California's child care aid misses hundreds of thousands of families who need it [The San Diego Union-Tribune]
It's already hard for the Reynosos to afford the
On top of the
If the Reynosos wanted to add child care for a baby into the mix, it would likely cost approximately
And that's assuming they could even find an available child care spot for the baby amid a severe shortage of infant spaces.
Still, the couple decided to have a baby and make it work.
Reynoso can't afford child care, but she can't afford to quit her job — she is a coach to local child care providers — to become a full-time parent, either. Neither can her husband, who works long hours for a medical imaging company and doesn't have as flexible a work schedule as she does. So she is taking care of her newborn herself while working from home full-time.
Reynoso is terrified, she said. She had tried the same thing with Ania and ended up crying herself to sleep many nights, feeling like she was failing at both her job and being a good mom.
"Adding the stress of having to work and take care of your child, it's really scary," Reynoso said. "You have your child whom you love with all your life, and feeling that mom guilt because you're not providing to your child the attention that they should have, especially a baby."
'Still just a drop in the bucket'
Child care is an essential service that the economy depends on — without it, parents can't work. Care and education for children in their earliest years is crucial to raising a healthy generation, providing social and emotional nurturing at arguably the most developmentally important time of children's lives.
But families, providers and experts have long warned that the child care industry nationwide is in crisis.
In most cases, neither public subsidies nor tuition paid by families are enough to cover child care programs' costs. Despite state help, providers and their employees suffer from razor-thin profit margins and low pay — perpetually struggling to make ends meet, much less to serve more children.
At the same time, the price of child care still far surpasses what most families can afford. The average
Child care in America, the agency declared, is "a classic market failure."
In
There is help for families in paying for child care, made possible by a decades-old federal law that helps fund subsidized child care programs in all 50 states.
Today,
These programs are the only statewide help
But even in one of the country's most progressive states, that system of support for years has been serving only a small fraction of families and has been missing hundreds of thousands of children who need it, an analysis of
The income limits to qualify for subsidized child care are so low that most young children can't access it. Fewer than 40 percent of
That has left many families like the Reynosos falling into a gap: They make too much to qualify for help but too little to afford care.
Making little enough to qualify is no guarantee of help, either. Most of the families who do qualify are not getting served.
Just 17 percent of
In the end,
That's partly because
In recent years, the state has made new efforts to serve more young children.
Gov.
The grade — which can be offered only by school districts, not child care providers — is expected to be available to all families by the 2025-2026 school year and to serve 450,000 children, a spokesperson for Newsom said in an email.
In 2021, Newsom and other state leaders also announced a plan to pay for 200,000 new subsidized child care spaces by 2026, calling it an unprecedented investment that would lift up women and working families.
But those new spaces represent just a third of the nearly 600,000 children under 4 who qualified for subsidized care but did not receive it in 2020, according to the Early Learning Needs Assessment Tool.
"We've definitely seen that increase — but you know, when you put it in context of the number of children that are eligible, it's still just a drop in the bucket," said
That is forcing parents — especially women, who are more likely than men to handle child care — to make personal, work and even health sacrifices to fill in the gap.
For some, parents told
Child care vs. career
After calling providers near their home in Point Loma, she found that she and her husband would have had to pay as much as
She also would have had to figure out how to drop off and pick up all three children, who would attend different schools, while commuting 45 minutes each way to her job in
She could find only one solution: to quit her job and become a stay-at-home mom. So she did.
Buzzell's husband's income is enough to sustain the whole family, she said. Now, it costs them the same for her not to work and instead to hire a part-time nanny at
"On paper, our income level says we can pay for it. But when it was comparing my salary to what the child care was going to cost, it just wasn't worth it," Buzzell said.
Buzzell doesn't know when she will be able to work again. And when she can, she wonders if the right job opportunity will be there.
She said she's lucky that her family's finances afford her the option to stay at home.
"But at the same time, it also makes you feel like your career and all the work that you've done and all of your ambitions — everything — are insignificant in a way. They're not necessary to keep our family moving," Buzzell said. "My ambitions and career path and passions, you know, those are important to keep me going."
'You start feeling like you're choking'
In
In all 58 counties, the income that a family of two parents and two children needs to earn in order to afford basic living expenses is higher than the income limit to qualify for help paying for child care, according to a
To qualify for subsidized care, families need to make no more than 85 percent of the state median income. For a family of four in the current fiscal year, that means they need to make less than
Because that number is the same for every county, it can be particularly hard to qualify in large cities where costs of living are higher. In 2022, the gap between the income needed to qualify for help and the income needed to make ends meet was as wide as
The state recently expanded access by raising the income limits to 100 percent of the state median income for one early learning program — state-funded preschool, which serves 3- and 4-year-olds. But state preschool provides limited help with child care for many working parents because most enrollment spots are part-time, as little as three hours a day.
The income limits would have risen more dramatically under President
The roughly
While the legislation had limits — states could choose not to participate, and federal funding for the programs would have lasted only until 2027 — its failure disappointed child care advocates.
"It was a BFD," said Ignatius, of Parent Voices, using the acronym for an expletive-containing expression for a significant event. "It was going to be our BFD moment, and we lost it by one senator."
For the Reynosos, such legislation could have been the difference between affordable child care for their newborn and Zaira's current juggling act.
Together, she and her husband take in about
That's nearly four times the income limit for a family of four to get free child care paid by the federal government under the
The Reynosos have considered ways they might make ends meet: Should she get a second job on the weekends? Should they forfeit health insurance? Could she return to her lower-paying job with the
Reynoso is frustrated. She feels like she did everything she was supposed to: She worked herself out of an impoverished childhood, when she bounced between her parents' places in
She worked minimum-wage jobs while getting her associate degree in early childhood education at
And for two years she and her husband lived in
So why, she wonders, can she still barely make ends meet?
"You start feeling like you're choking," Reynoso said. "Being able to qualify for programs or at least a discount … for affordable, good-quality child care — that would make all the difference."
When qualifying isn't enough
Even when families do qualify for subsidized child care, there's often no guarantee they will actually get it.
Elkins takes home about
"My job is paying for day care just so I can work to pay for day care," she said.
By the time she's made her
Meanwhile, her husband Aaron's job working in shipping and receiving for a car company is just enough to pay for groceries and other bills, she said.
There's no room in the family's budget to pay for child care for Ozzie. The rates they have seen for infant care centers ranged from
"I feel really just mostly bad for the family,"
She said she and her husband together make no more than
She applied for subsidized care in July. But six months later, she said she hasn't gotten a response.
Just because a family makes it onto the child care subsidy list doesn't guarantee they will get one.
"It will continue to be like that until the state decides to fund every eligible parent for subsidized child care, which would be a terrific thing for
Child care resource and referral agencies in roughly a dozen
But soon after they did, thousands of new families filled the lists again.
When there's an eligibility list for a child care subsidy, families who have the lowest incomes and biggest family sizes get priority. Families like Elkins', who have incomes in the higher range of eligibility, are less likely to get one.
Experts say that's why the vast majority of children who end up receiving subsidized child care through the state social services department come from very low-income families — 86 percent are from families that make less than
"A family can be on the waiting list for a long time and never get in because their income will never qualify, even though they're on the low-income part of the scale," said
Since the income eligibility limits are so low, some parents have passed up job promotions because they couldn't afford to lose their child care support, Alvarado and other child care agency officials said.
"If you're making minimum wage, it probably costs less for you to stay home and not work than go out and pay for child care," said
For some parents, the wait comes with costs.
The
It's not just a lack of funding keeping some eligibility lists long, agencies said.
Bureaucracy often delays care from getting to families, who have to provide extensive paperwork to prove that they need child care — including documentation of all income, from wages to child support to alimony, as well as proof of their marital status, employment and who lives in their home.
"It is not a parent-friendly system," said
Subsidizing the subsidy system
Once a family gets through the bureaucracy and secures a subsidy, they still have to find somewhere to use it — which child care experts say presents a whole other challenge.
There are more than three times as many children age 5 and under as there are licensed child care spaces for children that age in
If a family manages to qualify for a subsidy, secure one and find a place to use it, there's one more hurdle they must clear: They have to be able to pay for their subsidized child care.
The state does not cover the full cost of subsidized child care, so both families and child care providers fill in the gap by chipping in their own money — a phenomenon providers refer to as "subsidizing the subsidy system."
Families generally must pay monthly fees based on an income-based sliding scale from
Some
But with those few exceptions, if a family can't pay their fee, they lose their child care.
For the past two years,
More than 26,000 families were believed to have benefited last fiscal year, according to data obtained from the state. About
But the fees are set to return starting
In a letter to the Assembly explaining his veto, Newsom said although expanding access to early learning and care is a priority, he wasn't willing to cover the cost of the fees permanently. "With our state facing lower-than-expected revenues over the first few months of this fiscal year, it is important to remain disciplined when it comes to spending, particularly spending that is ongoing," he wrote.
The veto drew disappointment from child care advocates who call the fees a discriminatory policy that hurts poor families of color — almost three-quarters of families who receive subsidized child care are Latino or Black.
Parent Voices and other child care advocates have called for permanently eliminating family fees, expanding subsidized child care slots to cover everybody eligible and ensuring child care workers are paid enough to make a living wage.
"Low-income parents of color who qualify for subsidized child care have been subsidizing it with fees they can't afford," said Ignatius, of Parent Voices. "It could be as low as (
This story was produced as part of the
This story originally appeared in
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