In Kids Count Press Releases, News Releases

For Immediate Release
Sept. 28, 2021

Contact:
Alex Rossman
arossman@mlpp.org
517-775-9053

 

House Families Committee continues momentum on child care improvement with passage of legislation

Bills will establish family child care networks and contracts to support infant and toddler child care

LANSING—The Michigan League for Public Policy issued the following statement in support of the House Families, Children, and Seniors Committee’s passage today of House Bills 5041-5048, a bipartisan package of bills to improve child care access and better support child care providers. Child care continues to be a focus of the League’s and a bipartisan priority that benefits parents and children, workers and businesses, and the child care industry as a whole. The League submitted written testimony on the bills passed out of committee today, and also championed the historic investment in child care in the state budget passed last week. The statement can be attributed to League President and CEO Gilda Z. Jacobs.

“We are pleased with the bipartisan effort that resulted in this package of bills, and believe that they represent a significant step forward in supporting the state’s child care providers, as well as building the supply of child care. The League is particularly gratified to see authorization for family child care networks, an important tool for supporting home-based child care businesses as they struggle to juggle long hours of direct care for young children with the demands of running a small business. In addition, enhanced contracts to build the supply of now-scarce infant/toddler care is a much-needed strategy to ensure that child care providers can afford to take care of the state’s youngest children, who are more staff-intensive and most costly to care for.

“Child care providers are under enormous stress, and some are having to close for financial reasons. This is the result of a financing system for child care that doesn’t work. Michigan needs to move toward a child care financing system that increases access for parents and improves the quality of care for children, while allowing child care teachers to earn a living wage. Child care is a vital component of economic growth as well as a support to educational success, and we are happy to see the positive momentum on child care on this legislation and in the budget. We hope it will continue as the Legislature and governor negotiate billions of dollars in federal funding and continue to work on long-term investment in child care.”

ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND:

The League released a report last spring on state child care funding, Child Care Financing Reform: A Critical Next Step for Michigan Families and the Economy. The report showed that the current financing system hasn’t worked, resulting in an inadequate supply of affordable child care—especially for infants and toddlers—as well as very low wages for child care teachers, and unlike public schools, is not funded by the state apart from inadequate subsidies for families with low wages.

In addition to the report, the League’s Kids Count in Michigan project released fact sheets on child care for the state and each of Michigan’s 83 counties. The fact sheets for each county include information on whether the county is a child care desert or has low capacity, and the number of young children living in poverty in the county.

Both the report and the fact sheets were created as part of the Think Babies Michigan Collaborative, which launched earlier this year and is funded by the Pritzker Early Childhood Initiative.

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The Michigan League for Public Policy, www.mlpp.org, is a nonprofit policy institute focused on opportunity for all. Its mission is to advance economic security, racial equity, health and well-being for all people in Michigan through policy change. It is the only state-level organization that addresses poverty in a comprehensive way.