Sentinel & Enterprise

Staffing scramble at pre-Ks, daycare

Lack of workers leaves some places empty

- By Amy Sokolow

Although childcare workers and experts have warned of a staffing shortage for years, the crisis is now being felt more acutely than ever before as the school year ramps up.

“Pre- COVID, there was a waitlist for kids to come in and all of the classrooms were up and running,” said Jennifer Curtis, executive director of South Shore Stars, a non-profit organizati­on that hosts early childhood and youth programs.

Now, she said, “two of our early childhood programs… have classrooms that remain empty because we still have staffing needs.”

According to a study released earlier this year by the Boston Opportunit­y Council, Boston saw an 11% drop in the number of seats available for children since the end of 2017, and had permanentl­y lost 13% of its licensed childcare programs that were open pre-pandemic.

One study from the Center for American Progress estimated that only 28% of infants and toddlers statewide could be served by licensed childcare providers pre-pandemic.

Curtis said staff have turned over because they had to take care of their own families, were concerned about contractin­g COVID-19, or, reconciled whether they wanted to be in the workforce or whether they want to be

at home. As a nonprofit organizati­on, she’s not able to pay her workers as much as private or public centers can.

“You’re teaching your little ones in a prime developmen­tal phase that’s really going to make them successful for the rest of their educationa­l career,” she said. “It’s very frustratin­g when the salaries

aren’t where they should be so you can attract and maintain staff.”

Researcher­s have known about the “expensive childcare, low worker wages” paradox for a while, according to Alicia Modestino, associate professor at Northeaste­rn’s School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs and the Department of Economics.

“At this point in time, we’re going through this ‘Great Resignatio­n,’ where people are really rethinking what they’re doing

with their lives. They’re burnt out, they need to recharge,” she said of early education staff.

This childcare shortage is already having a ripple effect on the labor market, particular­ly for women. According to a recent study conducted by Modestino and other researcher­s at Northeaste­rn University, 26% of working women had to leave their jobs during the pandemic due to a lack of childcare. Low-income families are hit particular­ly hard when they can’t afford a private babysitter.

Andrea Wagner, chief technical officer at Berkshire Sterile Manufactur­ing, said she has had trouble filling the company’s open slots, partially because the daycare center inside the manufactur­ing facility where many employees send their kids at a discount has been shortstaff­ed throughout the pandemic.

Although Wagner is working closely with staff, who can’t work remotely, to rearrange shifts to accommodat­e childcare, “we have a lot of jobs that we

need to have filled,” she said. “We have had employees leave because they haven’t been able to manage the childcare, and it’s a tragedy.”

Last week, the Massachuse­tts Department of Early Education and Care moved to alleviate the pressure by temporaril­y loosening some profes

sional qualificat­ions for childcare roles.

In the long term, policies and workplace changes such as childcare subsidies, remote work flexibilit­y and in-house workplace childcare will all help alleviate the childcare gap and keep women in the workforce after millions have left, experts

said.

But to really effect change, researcher­s said childcare must be seen as infrastruc­ture, said Jamie Ladge, associate professor at Northeaste­rn’s business school. Just like road or bridge closures, she said, “How can you get to work if you don’t have childcare?”

 ?? Matt stone / boston Herald ?? executive director of south shore stars Jennifer curtis, above, says the staffing shortage in childcare is partly a result of many workers reconsider­ing their careers since the start of the pandemic.
Matt stone / boston Herald executive director of south shore stars Jennifer curtis, above, says the staffing shortage in childcare is partly a result of many workers reconsider­ing their careers since the start of the pandemic.

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