San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDEN TO SET CHILD CARE RULES FOR U.S. CHIPMAKERS

Manufactur­ers seeking subsidies must guarantee affordable care for workers

- BY JIM TANKERSLEY

The Biden administra­tion plans to leverage the federal government’s expansive investment in the semiconduc­tor industry to make progress on another goal: affordable child care.

The Commerce Department will announce today that any semiconduc­tor manufactur­er seeking a slice of nearly $40 billion in new federal subsidies will need to essentiall­y guarantee affordable, high-quality child care for workers who build or operate a plant.

Last year, a bipartisan group of lawmakers passed the CHIPS Act, which devoted $39 billion to directly boost U.S. semiconduc­tor factories as part of $52 billion in subsidies for the industry, in hopes of making the nation less reliant on foreign suppliers for critical chips that power computers, video games, cars and more.

Companies that receive the subsidies to build new plants will be able to use some of the government money to meet the new child care requiremen­t. They could do that in a number of ways, in consultati­on with Commerce officials who will set basic guidelines but not dictate how companies ensure workers have access to care they can afford.

That could include building company child care centers near constructi­on sites or new plants, paying local child care providers to add capacity at an affordable cost for workers, directly subsidizin­g workers’ care costs or other, similar steps that would ensure workers have access to care for their children.

U.S. employers, including manufactur­ers, are increasing­ly raising concerns that a lack of access to affordable child care is blocking millions of Americans from looking for work, particular­ly women. President Joe Biden pushed Congress to address those concerns over the past two years, proposing hundreds of billions of dollars for new child care pro

grams, but he was unable to corral support from even a majority of Senate Democrats.

But Biden did persuade lawmakers to approve a range of new spending programs seeking to boost U.S. manufactur­ing. Now, Commerce is trying to utilize a centerpiec­e of those efforts, which aims to expand U.S. semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing, to make at least a small dent in his large goals for the so-called care economy.

It joins a growing list of administra­tion efforts to expand the reach of Biden’s economic policies beyond their primary intent. For instance, administra­tion officials have attached stringent labor standards and “Buy America” provisions to money from a bipartisan infrastruc­ture law. The child care requiremen­t will be flexible for chipmakers, but it will almost certainly divert some subsidy dollars that are meant to expand factory capacity and create jobs.

The Commerce Department is expected to release its applicatio­n today, allowing companies to begin making a case for federal subsidies that the industry lobbied hard to secure from Congress.

The prospect of accessing those funds has already enticed domestic and foreign-owned chipmakers to announce billions of dollars in plans for new investment­s in Arizona, central New York and elsewhere.

But even as they ramp up investment­s, companies are complainin­g of difficulti­es in finding workers to build and operate manufactur­ing facilities.

The United States’ child care industry has not fully rebounded from the pandemic recession. It is still about 58,000 workers, or 5 percentage points, short of its pre-pandemic peak, according to an analysis of Labor Department data by the Center for the Study of Childcare Employment at the University of California Berkeley.

Shortly before the pandemic, the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington surveyed 35 states and found more than 11 million children had a potential need for child care — yet fewer than 8 million slots were available.

That shortage is particular­ly acute in some of the areas where manufactur­ers are set to begin building new chip plants spurred by the new legislatio­n. Commerce Department officials calculate that in the Syracuse, N.Y., area, where Micron announced a $100 billion chipmaking investment last year after Biden signed the new law, the need for slots in child care facilities is nearly three times the size of the actual care capacity in the region.

In Phoenix, where semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing is booming, child care costs consume about 18 percent of a typical constructi­on or manufactur­ing worker’s salary. That share is higher than the national average.

Gina Raimondo, the Commerce secretary, said in an interview that the child care requiremen­ts should help companies cope with a tight labor market by making it easier for them to attract and retain caregivers who have been kept from working by difficulti­es finding care for their own children.

In a speech last week, Raimondo called efforts to attract more women to the workforce “a simple question of math” for industries complainin­g of labor shortages. “We need chip manufactur­ers, constructi­on companies and unions to work with us toward the national goal of hiring and training another million women in constructi­on over the next decade to meet the demand not just in chips, but other industries and infrastruc­ture projects as well,” she said.

Only about 3 in 10 U.S. manufactur­ing workers are women. Raimondo said the CHIPS Act would fail if the administra­tion did not help companies change those numbers, by bringing in women who have children.

“You will not be successful unless you find a way to attract, train, put to work and retain women, and you won’t do that without child care,” Raimondo said in an interview.

 ?? PETE MAROVICH NYT ?? The administra­tion of President Joe Biden, pictured at a semiconduc­tor plant in Ohio last year, plans to leverage government investment in the chip industry to make progress on child care.
PETE MAROVICH NYT The administra­tion of President Joe Biden, pictured at a semiconduc­tor plant in Ohio last year, plans to leverage government investment in the chip industry to make progress on child care.
 ?? SARAH SILBIGER NYT ?? Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo (center) says child care programs should help the labor market.
SARAH SILBIGER NYT Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo (center) says child care programs should help the labor market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States