The Commercial Appeal

Report: Child care subsidies fall short

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON – Child care costs in most states exceed federal subsidy payments provided to low-income parents, according to a new report from the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General, leaving working families with few affordable options.

The report, released Tuesday, focuses on the Child Care Developmen­t Fund, an $8.2 billion block grant that goes toward offsetting the cost of care for 1.4 million children nationwide. The fund is the primary federal funding source for child care assistance for eligible working parents.

The federal recommenda­tion is that states provide payment rates at the 75th percentile, which allows eligible families to access three out of four providers without paying more out of pocket. But the report shows most states set their rates much lower.

States have discretion over how to administer the program: They set their own income requiremen­ts and decide how much families are expected to contribute. The report cites several reasons that states may keep their rates low, including stretching limited resources to serve more families and taking into considerat­ion the cost of higher-quality care. Nineteen states reported paying enrollment and registrati­on fees for low-income families, and seven states said they pay for extra child care activities such as field trips.

The Administra­tion for Children and Families, which oversees the block grant, relies on states to self-certify that they are setting rates that ensure lowincome families have equal access to care. But the inspector general report shows most states aren’t meeting the requiremen­ts.

Last year, under a bipartisan agreement, Congress approved a $2.4 billion increase to the fund. But advocates say money continues to be a problem.

“CCDF is severely underfunde­d, and as families across the country are struggling to afford care across all income levels, it’s dire for low-income families,” said Catherine White, director of child care and early learning at the National Women’s Law Center.

Meanwhile, the Trump administra­tion has moved to tighten work requiremen­ts for low-income families that receive food stamps and housing assistance, worrying some parents.

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