Hamilton Journal News

'Child care crisis' holds back children, parents, economy

Issue has costly ‘domino effect’ on families, workforce, student success.

- By Lynn Hulsey Staff Writer

ocal families are struggling to find affordable, quality child care and preschool, a problem that hinders companies’ ability to hire workers, leaves some kids unprepared for kindergart­en and takes a toll on the economy and society, a Dayton Daily News investigat­ion found.

“The reality is we have a child care crisis,” said state Rep. Andrea White, R-Kettering. “We have a workforce crisis.”

Local parents can pay as much as 19.8% of their county’s median family income for child care.

Butler, Greene, Montgomery and Warren counties are among the 27 Ohio counties with the state’s highest median annual cost — $14,189 — for the most expensive type of child care, which is center-based infant care, according to this newspaper’s analysis of the National Database of Child Care Prices released in January by the U.S. Department of Labor.

“Sometimes child care can be a college tuition for some parents,” said Shelly Jackson-Engram, owner of Ms. Shelly’s Place child care center in Moraine.

Families report waiting up to 6 months for a child care slot to open and it is particular­ly difficult to find evening and weekend care. Availabili­ty became more limited after many child care providers closed permanentl­y during the COVID-19 pandemic, and staffing shortages mean some of those that remain open accept fewer kids.

Fifty-two percent of parents said affording and accessing quality child care has become more difficult in the last year, according to a new statewide poll released by Groundwork Ohio, a non-partisan policy research and advocacy group.

“The region has a crushing shortage of child care seats,” said Lisa Babb, senior strategic director of 4C for Children, a nonprofit resource and referral child care and preschool agency serving 15 southwest Ohio counties.

When parents can’t find child care they can’t take jobs.

“More than two-thirds of non-working or part-time working moms of young children said that they would go back to work or they would work more hours if they had access to affordable, quality child care,” said Shannon Jones, a Warren County commission­er and president and CEO of Groundwork Ohio.

“The data that really jumps out is how pervasive of a problem it is: how many parents or working parents or parents who want to be working are being pushed out of the workforce because of child care,” Jones said of the poll byPublic Opinion Strategies, which surveyed 800 registered Ohio voters in February.

Local employers are feeling the loss of that talent in the workforce, said Stephanie Keinath, vice president of strategic initiative­s at the Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce.

“We cannot continue to accept the status quo,” she said. “Our families, our businesses and our communitie­s deserve a child care system that not only allows the current workforce to have the supports they need to thrive, but equally as important is the impact on our future workforce if we cannot get this right.”

Impacts to workforce, economy

Record numbers of women left the workforce during the pandemic, resulting in nearly 2.23 million fewer women in the labor force in 2021 than in 2019, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Last year women began returning,but as of March the number of women not in the labor force was still 1.4 million higher than pre-pandemic.

Their labor force participat­ion

FROM LEFT: rate, which measures the percentage of the population either working or actively looking for work, was 57.1%, still short of the 57.8% February 2020 rate.

When women are not in the workforce the economy feels it.

A new study found that the child care crisis costs the nation $122 billion, and costs Ohio $3.9 billion, annually in lost earnings and productivi­ty and reduced federal, state and local tax revenue.

“A combinatio­n of COVID19 and insufficie­nt policy action have now significan­tly worsened the crisis,” according to the February report by ReadyNatio­n, a business executive group, and Council for a Strong America, a bipartisan nonprofit made up of business executives, law enforcemen­t leaders and retired admirals and generals.

“Almost two-thirds of parents of infants and toddlers facing child care struggles reported being late for work or leaving work early, and more than half reported being distracted at work or missing full days of work,” the report said. “An overwhelmi­ng 85 percent of primary caregivers said problems with child care hurt their efforts or time commitment at work.”

Costs hurt families

The impact of the child care crisis is broad, but is felt most acutely by parents, particular­ly single parents and those with multiple children.

Child care costs vary depending on where it is provided — in a center or a home — and the age of the child. Infant care is the most expensive, and schoolage care is usually the least expensive.

Nationally the median annual child care price for one child ranged from $5,357 to $17,171, which is equivalent to 8% to 19.3% of median family income, according to the child care cost database.

In the 9-county Dayton/ Hamilton/Middletown/ Springfiel­d region the share of median income that families pay for one child ranges from 4.8% for school-age center-based care in Champaign County to 19.8% for center-based infant care in Montgomery County, the data show.

Families in Butler County and Clark County are paying 15.9% and 15.6% of median income respective­ly for center-based infant care, the data show.

The median annual child care cost ranges from $3,620 for center-based school-age care in Champaign County to $14,189 for center-based infant care in Butler, Greene, Montgomery and Warren counties.

‘A domino effect’

Locally-funded efforts like Dayton and Montgomery County Preschool Promise have helped, as did the state’s 2021 decisions to expand eligibilit­y for subsidized child care and use one-time child care stabilizat­ion funding from two federal COVID-relief bills to help child care centers and home-based providers remain open.

But only families with very low incomes — the annual limit is $32,703 for a family of three — are eligible for Ohio’s subsidies. Federal subsidies for Head Start don’t cover all eligible children and the COVID-relieffund­ed programs will end without an infusion of new money. President Joe Biden’s proposals to broadly expand public subsidies for child care and preschool have not been approved by Congress.

Eighty percent of those polled, including 87% of parents, said Ohio should increase funding for child care to increase access, affordabil­ity and quality, according to the Groundwork Ohio poll.

A broad range of advocacy groups, companies, health care and business organizati­ons and others are calling for policy makers to provide more state and federal funding to expand child care capacity, get more 3- and 4-year-olds into preschool, and lower costs for families while raising pay for child care and preschool workers.

“The child care crisis facing our state is among the primary challenges in recruiting and retaining reliable and productive workers. Parents’ decisions about work are greatly impacted by whether they have access to quality, affordable child care. The harsh reality is, in our state, they all too often do not,” according to a March 29 letter to Ohio legislator­s signed by 39 of those organizati­ons and companies in Ohio.

“Research shows these investment­s have a domino effect, with each step predictive of the next — from kindergart­en readiness to third grade reading achievemen­t to eighth grade math achievemen­t to high school graduation to postsecond­ary attainment,” the letter said.

 ?? NICK GRAHAM / STAFF ?? Lead teacher Amanda Varner holds student Ridvaan S. while Stephen K. and other students paint in the pre-K class at Mini University child care April 6 on Miami University campus in Oxford.
NICK GRAHAM / STAFF Lead teacher Amanda Varner holds student Ridvaan S. while Stephen K. and other students paint in the pre-K class at Mini University child care April 6 on Miami University campus in Oxford.
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