Los Angeles Times

Child-care workers are likely to live in poverty

Their wages are too meager for work so vital to the nation’s future, report says.

- By Danielle Paquette

The people paid to watch America’s children tend to live in poverty. Nearly half receive some kind of government assistance: food stamps, welfare checks, Medicaid. Their median hourly wage is $9.77 — about $3 below the average janitor’s.

In a new report, researcher­s at UC Berkeley say that child care is too vital to the country’s future to offer such meager wages. Those tasked with supporting kids, they say, are shaping much of tomorrow’s workforce.

“Economic insecurity, linked to low wages, remains endemic among those who care for and educate young children from birth to elementary school,” the authors wrote. “This condition has endured despite a much-altered landscape in which developmen­tal scientists, economists, and business and labor leaders have widely recognized the importance of early care and education in shaping children’s developmen­t, promoting the health of families, and building a strong economy.”

In the United States, roughly 2 million adults make a living by caring for and educating more than 12 million children, from infants to 5-year-olds. Last year, 46% of child-care workers were part of families enrolled in at least one public safety net program, compared with 26% of those in the broader workforce. Low pay contribute­s to a revolving door of staffers. The average annual turnover rate among early childhood education staffers, for example, hovers around 30%.

Wages remain paltry even among the college-educated workforce. Early childhood education is the college major that yields the lowest lifetime pay.

Marcy Whitebrook, director of UC Berkeley’s Center for the Study of Child Care Employment, who co-wrote the report, said these economic conditions aren’t ideal for toddlers who require both environmen­tal stability and the constant attention of their caregivers. Plus, highly skilled workers might turn down a day-care job for brighter financial opportunit­ies elsewhere.

The National Institute of Child Health Developmen­t labels the majority of America’s day-care programs “fair” or “poor.” Just 10%, the organizati­on said, offer high-quality care.

“We’re entrusting children to people who are really struggling to feed their own families,” Whitebrook said. “They’re managing all this stress, which is distractin­g to all the important work they have to do.”

Not that financial stress always translates to poor workplace performanc­e. But study after study has found that anxiety about money can cloud thoughts, thwart concentrat­ion and zap energy.

The danger can be more subtle than, say, failing to remove a choking hazard from a playroom. If a distracted worker doesn’t interact with a baby for an hour or two, it’s unlikely that alone will damage the child’s health. Repeated periods of no contact, however, could have adverse long-term effects.

Neuroscien­tists say the foundation of our attention span, memory and impulse control is largely laid before age 3. Jack Shonkoff, director of Harvard University’s Center on the Developing Child, wrote in a 2000 study that early interactio­ns build the way we come to think and react. If a baby’s environmen­t is volatile or “unresponsi­ve” — meaning no one is touching or talking to the baby for long periods — stress hormones surge, disrupting the mental growth process. The child is more likely to experience anxiety or depression as an adult and less likely to stay in school or out of jail.

“Children in settings with high turnover,” Whitebrook said, “you see the impact on them, in terms of language and social developmen­t.”

The economics of child care in the U.S. remain broken, she said. Parents are spending mortgage-like sums to get their toddler a spot at a local day care, even if its quality is unclear. Providers aren’t profiting much, thanks largely to regulation­s that exist to keep kids safe.

The report’s recommenda­tion: States should pour more money into child care, since the market alone isn’t boosting worker wages. Public money for centers, for example, can give owners the power to raise pay, attracting more skilled and less distracted employees.

Paquette writes for the Washington Post.

 ?? Don Lee Los Angeles Times ?? THE MEDIAN HOURLY WAGE for child-care workers is $9.77, about $3 below the average janitor’s. Above, Asiya Jabbaar, an early childhood education teacher in Oakland, works with kids at her child-care center.
Don Lee Los Angeles Times THE MEDIAN HOURLY WAGE for child-care workers is $9.77, about $3 below the average janitor’s. Above, Asiya Jabbaar, an early childhood education teacher in Oakland, works with kids at her child-care center.

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