Dayton Daily News

Child care organizati­on gets a deal for $340,000 to boost ‘glaring need’

County dips into funds from American Rescue Plan Act.

- By Nancy Bowman Contributi­ng Writer

Miami County will pay more than $340,000 to an organizati­on to provide resources for existing and future child care centers and home programs to help meet child care needs, a barrier cited frequently in workforce developmen­t discussion­s.

Miami County commission­ers recently approved an agreement with 4C for Children of Dayton that will run through Dec. 31, 2023.

A group from the across the county including representa­tives of communitie­s and foundation­s has met to talk about the “glaring need” for child care in the county, County Administra­tor Charlotte Colley said.

“We do not have enough available publicly funded spots for child care with providers with correct licenses through the state. 4C for Children will work with current and future child care providers either in homes or in centers to help them get the training, education and resources they need to maintain and expand programs and get higher certificat­ions,” she said.

The agreement is designed to make more care available along with improving quality of some of the existing care, Colley said.

The money will come from the county’s American Rescue Plan Act funding and will be used only in Miami County, she said.

The commission­ers “believe this investment will help our workforce developmen­t activities,” said Commission­er Wade Westfall.

The need for more child care

for people at all income levels often comes up in discussion­s about workforce and employers ongoing need to find more employees.

“There was a shortage in available child care before the pandemic, but it has intensifie­d,” said Lisa Babb, senior strategic director, program operations for 4C for Children of Dayton.

Among those involved in the local child care discussion­s has been representa­tives of the Troy Foundation. Child care and transporta­tion led the list of pressing needs in Troy in a community needs assessment the foundation had conducted. It later set aside $260,000 for a priority needs fund to be used to address those top needs.

At a minimum 4C for Children said it will develop nine new programs — six in homes and three centers.

The programs will be establishe­d with training covering start up, training for employees, educationa­l materials and equipment if needed, such as cribs, furniture, safety equipment and technology for reporting. Steps also are planned to help existing programs grow, all to help increase the number of available child care spots.

4C for Children will work with a number of partners, Babb said.

Among those will be existing businesses, libraries, churches, schools and school organizati­ons such as PTAs, unlicensed child care provider Facebook groups and the county Department of Job and Family Services. Colley said the county’s Child Care Choices nonprofit also will be involved.

Babb said 4C for Children has a standard model that it uses to support child care efforts in counties, cities and projects with the model adjusted to meet each area’s specific needs.

In a statement of work, 4C for Children said the county currently has 13 quality-rated child care centers and one family child care program with contracts to serve children from low-income families who receive public child care dollars. Another 10 licensed child care programs do not have publicly funded child care agreements.

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