Giving Compass' Take:
- Elly Yu reports on how a record 70% of child care providers can't afford essential needs such as food, housing, and health care.
- What are the root causes of child care workers being some of the lowest paid workers in the country? How can donors advocate for improved compensation for these essential workers?
- Learn more about key issues in child care and how you can help.
- Search our Guide to Good for nonprofits focused on child care in your area.
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The number of child care workers who struggle to meet basic needs like food, healthcare and housing is on the rise, according to a new report.
The Stanford Center on Early Childhood’s RAPID project started surveying child care providers around the country back in 2021, when about 40% of workers said they struggled to afford a basic need.
In March of this year, that rose to nearly 70% — the highest since the project started.
“ We've started to talk about some of these data as like representing the canary in a coal mine kind of a scenario,” said Philip Fisher, director of the Stanford Center on Early Childhood.
Since child care providers are among the lowest paid workers in the country, challenges in the economy — like the rising cost of food — “are hitting home for them more than they would for other people,” Fisher said. Providers have to buy goods like diapers and food for their child care centers that eat into their income. Many have had to make the decision to close their centers.
Why Can't Child Care Providers Afford Basic Needs? Where Are the Biggest Problems?
One of the most notably worsening problem for child care providers has been health care — where nearly two-thirds of workers said it was a material hardship this past spring. In 2023, nearly 37% of child care workers were covered by Medi-Cal in California.
The majority childcare providers also said utilities were a struggle to afford.
Fisher said those two rise to the top because providers are often prioritizing their limited money on needs like housing and food.
“Food is something that people continue to try to acquire, even if they're skipping meals. But utility payments typically go quickly and health care is another thing that typically goes out the window, because people are prioritizing other things when that happens,” he said.
He added that the rising numbers point to worsening economic challenges, like low wages and the rising costs of living.
Read the full article about child care providers by Elly Yu at LAist.