The Boston Globe

At business event, Clark unveils push for child care

Initiative aims to urge Congress to boost funding

- By Jon Chesto Jon Chesto can be reached at jon.chesto@globe.com.

After failing to move a gop-led Congress last year to re-up federal assistance for child-care centers, us Representa­tive Katherine Clark is turning to the business community for help in making her case.

Clark, who as house minority whip is one of the highest ranking democrats in Congress, announced a new “Affordable Child Care Agenda” on Friday at the annual meeting of Associated industries of massachuse­tts. Clark’s initiative includes a website in which she is enlisting businesses and residents to sign on as “citizen cosponsors,” calling on Congress to make child care more affordable and accessible, and to improve wages for child-care workers. Aim agreed to be one of the first such citizens cosponsors, and presented Clark with the inaugural Aim Frances perkins Award in recognitio­n of her work for gender equity and caregiver support for the workforce.

“We know the business community is absolutely critical to reimaginin­g our care system,” Clark said in an interview. “This is a national crisis that certainly hits home in my district and across the Commonweal­th.”

Clark, working with senators Bernie sanders and patty murray, tried to pass legislatio­n in Washington last year that would have set aside some $16 billion a year for child care, essentiall­y to keep the industry from falling off a funding cliff as federal subsidies tied to Covid19 pandemic relief ran out last september. Clark said the effort was rebuffed by

Republican lawmakers. now, classrooms and centers are starting to shut down as the money runs out in states that did not allocate additional funding to make up for the loss of federal subsidies. massachuse­tts has continued to use state funds, including money from the so-called millionair­es tax that was passed by voters in 2022, to supply what are known as C3 grants for the industry. Clark said her home state is among 11 states that have kept pandemic-era funding alive, but the majority of states have not.

By launching an online petition and advocacy initiative, Clark said she hopes to put public pressure on Congress to act, and release more federal money to sustain a vital sector to the economy.

“We are in the middle of a paradigm shift that really started with the pandemic exposing the fragility of this system and making the connection that this is not a luxury item or something that is nice to have, it is such a critical piece of our ... economic infrastruc­ture,” Clark said. “What we are trying to do here is build that political will and give voice to what is very real support for child care.”

Clark spoke at the first annual meeting in which a woman is the CEo of Aim, a statewide business group. The timing is not coincident­al. newly elevated CEo Brooke Thomson wanted to honor Clark’s advocacy with an award named after Frances perkins, a massachuse­tts native who became the first woman to serve in a presidenti­al cabinet when she joined Franklin d. Roosevelt’s administra­tion as labor secretary; perkins and Thomson are both mount holyoke College alums.

Thomson said the number one challenge for her members is finding enough workers to fill vacant positions, and inadequate child care is making that harder.

“We were already under capacity, pre-Covid,” said Thomson, a single mom with two kids. “The industry was decimated. it’s still having a hard time coming back . ... it’s having an impact on workers’ ability to show up, it’s having an impact on workers’ ability to come back to the office in person, and it’s having an impact on mental health.”

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Representa­tive Katherine Clark
shAnnon FinnEY/gETTY imAgEs Representa­tive Katherine Clark

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