National Women's Law Center: Analysis – At Least $9.6 Billion Needed Each Month to Preserve Child Care System Nationwide Through Pandemic
The child care system needs at least
With these funds, child care providers could meet the higher operational costs associated with safely providing emergency care due to smaller class sizes, increased staffing costs, new hygiene measures, and rising costs of supplies. Furthermore, these funds would ensure that many more child care providers that have lost revenue due to forced closures or significantly reduced enrollment can reopen at full capacity when parents start going back to work.
This analysis estimates that emergency and relief funds would cover the cost of providing care for roughly 6 million children with parents in essential industries who need emergency care and sustain more than 350,000 center-based child care programs and home-based providers across the country, regardless of their operating status during the pandemic.
"Our estimates show that
"The economic strength of families nationwide rests on the backs of this marginalized and underpaid workforce. If
"Child care providers survive on thin margins and the coronavirus economic crisis squeezes them between falling demand and increased difficulty delivering services, threatening to push many out of existence. Unlike most other small businesses, each failed care provider can directly prevent many workers' return to employment. We need some of the sector's capacity to provide emergency care to essential workers now and the rest kept restart-ready to support Americans' return to work when it becomes safely possible."
Last month, nearly 500 national and state organizations called on policymakers to provide at least
The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, or CARES Act--passed by
The complete report, including the methodology and technical appendix, is available here (https://nwlc.org/resources/child-care-is-key-to-our-economic-recovery-what-it-will-take-to-stabilize-the-system-during-this-crisis/).
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