Post-Tribune

Child care aid funded by US takes a step closer to reality

- By Mary Clare Jalonick and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Women — and some men — in Congress have been fighting for government child care assistance for almost 80 years. With President Joe Biden’s $1.85 trillion social services package, they are as close as they have ever been to winning.

Biden’s bill making its way through Congress also would put the U.S. on course to providing free prekinderg­arten, paid family leave to care for children or sick loved ones, and an enhanced child tax credit in a massive expansion of federal support to working families.

Taken together, it’s Democrats’ answer to President Richard Nixon’s veto of a 1971 child care bill and the earlier scrapping of World War II-era child care centers.

“I think COVID really illustrate­d to people how broken our child care system is in a way that people finally understood,” said Sen. Tammy Duckworth, an Illinois Democrat with two young children.

The child care subsidies would attempt to guarantee that most Americans don’t spend more than 7% of their income on child care.

Long before child care started eating up a sizable share of a family’s income and the COVID-19 crisis pushed women from the workforce to care for kids at home, Congress tried to lower the costs of child raising in the U.S.

Some 80 years ago, Rep. Mary Norton of New Jersey — she was known as “Battling Mary,” the first female Democrat elected to the House — was instrument­al in securing money for child care centers during World War II as mothers went off to work. But the program was terminated soon after the war ended and never resurrecte­d.

A quarter of a century later, Nixon invoked communism and traditiona­l female roles when he vetoed bipartisan legislatio­n to federally fund child care, saying it was “radical” and had “family-weakening implicatio­ns.”

“We’re still fighting for it,” says House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairwoman Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticu­t Democrat who has been pushing for child care subsidies and other programs to help families since she was a Senate aide in the 1980s. “You don’t have a functionin­g economy without a strong child care system.”

With Republican­s opposed, Democrats are trying to pass Biden’s bill on their own in what has become a messy process. One conservati­ve Democrat, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, is not fully on board with parental leave and other proposals, leaving their final inclusion uncertain.

Republican­s worry that providing an expanded federal safety net for American households with children is a slippery slope toward a socialist-style system.

Republican­s say the programs’ costs — almost $400 billion for the child care and preschool piece alone — are too high and would create more government intrusion into families’ lives.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky called Biden’s approach “radical” in a speech on the Senate floor last week. McConnell said Biden’s administra­tion “wants to insert itself into the most intimate family decisions and tell parents how to care for their toddlers.”

But the women who have championed familyfrie­ndly federal policies, many of whom ran for office and were elected in part because of their experience as parents, say times have changed.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who was first elected three decades ago and recalls voters asking her what she would do with her children if she won, says the country has evolved since Nixon suggested communal support would upend the traditiona­l family structure.

“There’s more women in Congress, there’s more women at work, there’s more families who have to have that income in order to be able to put food on the table, send their kids to college,” Murray said.

The House bill would phase in the new child care entitlemen­t program over three years, starting immediatel­y for prekinderg­arten for families who earn their state’s median income. Enrolled families would receive subsidies to use at participat­ing facilities, which could range from child care centers to home day cares.

The program would eventually expand to families that earn 250% of that median income by 2025, giving the child care industry time to build up after the pandemic forced many layoffs and closures.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., is also the mother of two young children.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., is also the mother of two young children.

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