The Boston Globe

Massachuse­tts needs a robust child-care system

- By Karen Spilka Karen Spilka is president of the Massachuse­tts Senate. Lauren Birchfield Kennedy is co-president and chief sorategy Officer at Neighborho­od Villages.

Working parents, imagine that you’re waiting to hear if your fourth grader will be going to school next fall. She’s been on a waitlist for 14 months. You hope to hear soon, because you’ll need to delay your career to stay home with her if she doesn’t get a spot.

This scenario is basically unthinkabl­e for students in K-12 education, but it plays out far too often for parents of infants and toddlers seeking child care in Massachuse­tts.

This happens even though research has shown that quality early education and care in the first five years of life greatly increases the chances of a student’s success later in life — and despite the reality that parents and caregivers often choose to — or need to — work after welcoming a child to the family.

It’s well past time to argue the merits and necessity of a robust early education and care infrastruc­ture in Massachuse­tts and get to work on implementi­ng a solution. That’s why this week the Senate is taking up the EARLY ED Act, comprehens­ive early education and care reform that will help teach our youngest learners and stabilize this crucial sector of our economy.

For far too long, early education and care has been a lose-lose propositio­n for families and programs. While the average annual cost of child care for one infant in Massachuse­tts is nearly $21,000 — one of the highest costs of any state in the nation — childcare workers make so little money that they often leave the profession for other jobs. The COVID-19 pandemic laid bare the unsustaina­bility of this sector, causing many programs to close and forcing parents to stay home to take care of their children — ultimately setting women’s participat­ion in the workforce back to 1986 levels.

The weaknesses in our early education and care infrastruc­ture call out for a wholesyste­m approach to reform, one that provides lasting stability for programs, educators, and children. The bill being debated Thursday takes an important step toward providing that stability by making the state’s Commonweal­th Cares for Children (C3) funding permanent. These monthly operationa­l grants, which were created during the pandemic to allow programs to keep their doors open, have become indispensa­ble to early education and care programs across the Commonweal­th. Unlike other states where programs are scrambling as their federal COVID funding disappears, programs in Massachuse­tts are paying their staff more, avoiding steep tuition increases, and opening up more spaces for children. These grants need to be made permanent.

This legislatio­n would also open the possibilit­ies of more affordable quality early education to thousands of families with lower incomes through expanding eligibilit­y for subsidized child-care slots. In fact, the bill would cap out-of-pocket costs for families receiving state child-care financial assistance at 7 percent of a family’s income. For families trying to provide a strong start for their children while struggling with the high cost of living in Massachuse­tts, this new provision would provide financial relief and the peace of mind that comes with not having to worry about one more skyrocketi­ng expense.

The Commonweal­th can’t guarantee the quality in the promise of quality early education and care without ensuring that early education and care programs hire and retain the most qualified, well-compensate­d workforce. This bill directs the Department of Early Education and Care to develop a career ladder with recommende­d salaries and benefits for early educators. It also makes permanent our existing early educator scholarshi­p and creates a new loan forgivenes­s program.

Finally, our whole-system approach needs to include a key sector of our economy that benefits greatly from a robust child-care ecosystem in Massachuse­tts — employers. That’s why the EARLY ED Act includes an innovative pilot program that incentiviz­es public-private investment­s in new child-care slots.

The Senate has been working toward two goals lately: addressing affordabil­ity, competitiv­eness, and equity in the state; and advancing a Student Opportunit­y Plan that provides quality education for our children from birth to adulthood. Comprehens­ive early education and care reform will help us achieve both these goals and much more. It’s time for Massachuse­tts to act.

 ?? SUZANNE KREITER/GLOBE STAFF ?? At the Dr. Thomas J. Curran Early Childhood Education Center, Jessie Barton worked on reading in her kindergart­en class.
SUZANNE KREITER/GLOBE STAFF At the Dr. Thomas J. Curran Early Childhood Education Center, Jessie Barton worked on reading in her kindergart­en class.

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