Dayton Daily News

New rules may shut some child care providers

Operators face 2020 deadline to meet state’s tougher standards.

- By Josh Sweigart and Jeremy P. Kelley Staff Writers

More than two-thirds of the providers in southwest Ohio who serve families with publicly funded child care are at risk of losing the ability to accept state funds when new rules go into effect in 18 months, a Dayton Daily News investigat­ion found.

The new rules and rating system were aimed at exposing more children to enrichment programs and educationa­l offerings, with an eye toward improving kindergart­en readiness. On a fivestar rating scale, providers will be required to earn at least one star by July 2020 to receive perchild funding from the state, and three stars by 2025.

The Ohio Department of Job and Family Services last year released a study that found “there is evidence that sites with higher star ratings (three-star or higher) are associated with better child outcomes.”

But the new rules could have a host of unintended consequenc­es, the investigat­ion found.

The newspaper interviewe­d providers with decades of experience who are considerin­g changing careers because of the new requiremen­ts.

Parents of thousands of children could be forced to find new providers — and fight to get one of the available slots in rated centers, experts say.

And some parents could be forced to drop out of the workforce entirely if they can’t afford to pay for child care out of pocket.

“We’re hitting a crisis point,” said Lisa Babb, strategic operations director of 4C for Children, which is tasked by the state with helping the region’s publicly funded child care centers meet the new requiremen­t.

The new rules go into effect on July 1, 2020. At that point, any child care agency that does not have a star rating under Ohio’s Step Up to Quality program will no longer be able to bill the state.

This could impact thousands of children across the region. Of the 1,513 centers receiving subsidized child care across southwest Ohio, more than 1,000 are unrated and thus do not meet the 2020 requiremen­t.

The number of children in those programs — 18,303 — is more than half the children in publicly funded child care in the region.

Big hurdles

Ohio allocates more than $630 million per year to subsidized child care ($400 million of it federal pass-through money), which helps fund centers that serve more than 100,000 Ohio children. The voucher system subsidizes care based on a sliding scale, with higher-income families paying a greater share of the cost.

Child care industry advocates have been pushing for the state to raise its reimbursem­ent rate, saying it does not cover the true cost of providing care. That, coupled with the burden of meeting the new requiremen­ts, could force more operators out of the business.

“We know there are going to be centers that have contracts that have no intention to get rated because they have one or two children ... and it’s just not worth it for them,” Babb said. “They don’t want to jump through the hoops.”

Small, home-based centers that serve only a handful of kids have the biggest hurdles to climb. Of Montgomery County’s 82 Type B centers — those serving no more than six children — just 12 currently meet the rating requiremen­t, or 15 percent, according to the investigat­ion. Only 24 percent of Butler County Type B homes are rated, and 17 percent of those in Clark County.

Montgomery County has 274 child care centers accepting kids under publicly funded child care. This includes churches and centers like YMCA programs, as well as in-home day care businesses. Only 108, or 39 percent, are rated. Unrated programs serve 3,585 children.

In Butler County 1,229 children are currently in unrated programs. In Clark County, the number is 379.

Small counties face a

County Champaign Clark Darke Greene Miami Montgomery Preble Butler Clermont Hamilton Warren Total Source:

Number of centers

‘I expect to change careers’

1513

particular challenge. Of the 12 centers in Champaign County, only two are rated. Of 15 in Miami County, only three are rated.

“And they are so spread out ... if a couple centers close or programs close, the impact it’s going to have on those families and on the workforce out there is huge,” Babb said.

Some operators told this newspaper they will close down over the rule change. Melissa Boswell has been running a small day care out of her Springfiel­d home for 28 years. But she doesn’t have a high school diploma, she said, which is one of the requiremen­ts under the new standards.

“I expect to change careers,” she said. “I have a hard time going back to school to do something I’ve been doing for 28 years. if I’m going to have to go back to school, maybe it’ll be for something different.”

Boswell currently has five children in her care, most of whom are on vouchers.

She said she knows of several other women exiting the program for the same reason. She believes the educationa­l standards should apply to new employees, but profession­als like her should be grandfathe­red in.

“We’ve got years of experience,” she said. “A high school diploma at this point is not going to change anything for us.”

The biggest obstacle for operators is meeting the rating system’s requiremen­t that administra­tors and a percentage of teachers have postsecond­ary certificat­ions such as a Child Developmen­t Associate, Babb said.

“The person that needs to go through these steps (the facility administra­tor) ... they’re in the infant room one day, then they’re driving a bus the next day, and they’re being stretched so many different directions,” Babb said.

Some administra­tors held off on meeting the certificat­ion requiremen­ts, hoping state lawmakers would amend or eliminate the requiremen­t, according to Babb. But that doesn’t appear likely. Gov.-elect

1 star 207

2 star 44 Source:

3 star Mike DeWine campaigned on expanding eligibilit­y to the program, but leaders of his incoming administra­tion say they are not looking to change the rating system and instead will work to make sure providers meet the deadlines and stay open.

Tiffany Spicer, administra­tor of Hickory Dickory Tots in West Chester Twp., said only about 19 percent of her center’s 200 children are on state-funded vouchers. Although she is not sure it is worth the extra administra­tive work to go for more stars by 2025, she said she would go through the process “just to keep those children.

“They deserve anything and everything a private-pay family will get,” she said.

Seeking better outcomes

66

4 star 43

The rating system has existed since 2012, when lawmakers tied it to a major education reform bill, Senate Bill 314.

Concerned some operators were doing little more than baby-sitting, lawmakers sought to ensure that children were being exposed to

5 star 103

Not rated 1050 31 enrichment programs.

“It makes sense that if we’re going to be giving this much of our tax dollars, we should have some sort of a requiremen­t that the children are not going to be put in front of a TV,” Babb said.

The state also wanted to address a problem that continues to trouble educators: getting enough kids ready for kindergart­en.

Data assembled by University of Dayton Professor Richard Stock show only about 38 percent of Montgomery County children are fully ready for kindergart­en when they start.

“(The rating system) takes child care beyond basic health and safety licensing requiremen­ts, where it used to be, and puts the emphasis into things that we know build a strong educationa­l program — like the education requiremen­ts of the teacher, and the curriculum, and assessment­s and communicat­ion with parents,” said Robyn Lightcap, executive director of Preschool Promise, which works to improve early childhood education in Montgomery County.

But Lightcap said the rating system is based on establishi­ng quality processes and not on children’s actual outcomes, such as readiness for kindergart­en or future school success. As more centers are forced to meet the state’s requiremen­ts for providing care under the state program, advocates and others will be looking to see if the changes have moved the needle on those outcomes, Lightcap said.

‘Show me proof ’

Many child care centers do a terrific job putting kids on a successful path. On a recent morning, children at Good Shepherd Academy child care in Miamisburg were engaged in a range of educationa­l endeavors under the supervisio­n of center manager Eartha DeWalt.

Four children took turns writing math problems and one another’s names on a marker board. Younger children played with blocks in one room or sang songs as they moved among classrooms. The activity room was noticeably quiet as children were at work on supervised activities.

Good Shepherd serves 39 children from infant-age to school-age, with a mix of private-pay families and those on publicly funded child care subsidies. It is rated with two stars.

Director Palmer Jason said much of the star-rating process is not purely “How good is your center?” but rather, “Did you do the work to document your procedures?” He said it took six to eight months of preparatio­n for the assessment and inspection, adding that the 4C for Children agency was a huge help in that process.

Jason said he had to document the frequency of informal conference­s with parents, save copies of newsletter­s and family reports sent home, file copies of text message exchanges with parents and more.

“All of those are things that we were already doing to communicat­e, but then the state comes in and says, ‘Show me proof,’” said Jason. “It’s a huge commitment in terms of time and resources.”

Jason said he has never had parents ask about Good Shepherd’s rating status.

“When we hung our twostar banner, our parents said, ‘Oh, that’s great,’” he said. “But every parent has their own definition of quality, and if their personal definition is being met, they’re happy.”

State: Goal within reach

The Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, which administer­s the Step Up To Quality program, downplayed concerns of a crisis, saying 52 percent of the state’s children in statefunde­d child care centers are in rated programs now.

“In other words, statewide statistics show that providers are well on their way toward reaching the 2020 goal with more than a year and a half to go,” OD JFS spokesman Bret Crowe said.

OD JFS is hosting Step Up To Quality fairs around the state, shifting child care licensing staff to helping programs get rated, committing $2 million in scholarshi­ps for child care teaching staff, and providing wage supplement­s to reward workers for getting training.

They are also contractin­g with regional agencies such as 4C for Children, which offers classes, coaching and other services free of charge. In addition, Babb is urging parents to get involved.

“We’re encouragin­g parents to ask your child care provider: ‘Do you have a onestar? Are you working toward becoming a quality-rated center so you can continue to care for my child who’s on a voucher?’” she said.

Babb said she is concerned about the impact on local families if too many operators fail to meet the standards set by the state.

“In 2020, if we have 300 centers or programs that shut down, where are those children going to go?” she said. “Unless they find some other program that has open spots for the ages of their children, they probably — with the level of income they’re at — they’re probably not going to be able to afford to private-pay and go to another child care center.”

 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? Center manager Eartha DeWalt of Good Shepherd Academy in Miamisburg helps Kenzie Dawson in writing and spelling.
TY GREENLEES / STAFF Center manager Eartha DeWalt of Good Shepherd Academy in Miamisburg helps Kenzie Dawson in writing and spelling.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States