Who's
Minding the Children?
The
State of Child Care in Massachusetts
As
more and more parents enter the workforce, a lack of affordable,
high quality care for infants, preschool children, and school-age
children has become a critical problem in our state. Nearly
500,000 of our children under age 12 have working parents
(1). These parents need access to safe, reliable, convenient,
and affordable child care so they can keep on working to
build a secure future for their families (2).
Quality
care provides the nurturing and stimulation that kids have
always received from parents and relatives. In quality programs,
well-trained and well-paid staff care for small groups of
children in safe, clean, attractive surround ings, supplied
with stimulating, age-appropriate activities and equipment.
Parents are involved in many ways, and staff turnover is
low.
| Why
Is Quality Care Important? |
-
Quality
child care is good for children. The research
evidence is overwhelming: quality early care and educa
tion can mean the difference between failing and passing
in school, regular or special education, staying out
of trouble or being involved in crime and delinquency,
dropping out or graduating from high school (3). Compared
to children in low quality programs, kids in high quality
care are more secure and self-confident, less impulsive
and aggressive, have better language and thinking skills,
and are healthier (4).
-
Affordable,
quality child care helps families work. Both
parents work in three out of four of New England's
two-parent families (5). And one in four Massachusetts
children is being raised by a single parent (6). Women
now account for 61% of the state's labor force, a
figure that has increased more than 20% since the
mid-1970s (7). Paid workand the affordable child care
needed to support ithave become essential to family
well -being because men's real wages (adjusted for
inflation) have declined (5), and because changes
in welfare laws have moved more parents into the labor
force.
| Why
Address the Issue of Child Care? |
"There
are so many families where parents really want to work,
but lack of access to affordable, high quality care
is a barrier," says Elaine Fersh, director of Parents
United for Child Care. Jason Sachs, of Boston EQUIP/Associated
Day Care Services, agrees: "The challenge is to
improve child care affordability, access, and quality
so that all Massachusetts working parents can be secure
in the knowledge that their kids are well cared for."
Clearly, Massachusetts must work to:
-
Increase
resources for low-income and working families
to gain access to child care
-
Support
renovation and construction to increase the supply
of high quality facilities
-
Maintain
and support a well-trained, well-paid child care
work force.
Finding
child care is a daunting task for most working parents.
For poor parents, child care can be a perpetual emergency
of patched-together arrangements that quickly break
down if someone gets sick or work hours change. Middle-income
families may have more options, but finding the right
caregiver while keeping the family budget intact is
still a source of anxiety.
-
Demand
for child care If quality child care were
available to everyone who wanted it, how many Massachusetts
kids would be enrolled? The cur rent best answer to
that questionapproximately 500,000 kidsis an estimate
based on the number of our children under age 12 who
have work ing parents (1). The figure doesn't include
kids whose parents would work if they could find affordable
care. And demand is growing. In fiscal year 1997,
for example, calls to Child Care Resource and Referral
programs (CCR&Rs) increased by 10%, and referral
requests from families earning less than $23,000 annually
grew by 46% (2). The demand for child care is expected
to continue to increase based on demographic trends,
increased availability of subsidies, and welfare to
work initiatives.
-
Demand
for subsidized early child care For families
with incomes below the median income for a 4-person
Massachusetts familyapproximately $45,000 in the mid-1990s
(6)the cost of child care can easily exceed rent and
car payments. But few of these parents have access
to state-subsidized care. In Fall 1997, for example,
there were only 56,595 slots for subsidized early
child care in our state (8).
-
The
after-school-care problem Many of our preteens
spend their afternoons at home alone without adequate
supervision. Some do their homework, but many while
away the time watching television or engaging in risky
behavior. Unsupervised kids are more than twice as
likely as children in after-school programs to use
alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana. Still others hang
out on the street and get in trouble with the law.
One recent national study based on FBI arrest statistics
found that juvenile violent crime triples in the hour
that school lets out (9).
| A
Profile of Child Care Needs, 1997 |
| Requests
by Type of Care |
Ages
of Children Needing Care |
 |
 |
Source: Massachusetts Child Care Resource
and Referral Network.
| Availability
of Child Care |
As
of December 1, 1997, the number of licensed child care slots
for children ages birth through twelve was 196,726 (2).
This figure, which includes family child care, group day
care programs, and school-age programs, is well below es
timated need. Across the state, many providers are unable
to accommodate children waiting for care. And the shortage
is compounded by mismatches between availability and need:
care is in short supply in poor communities; many pro viders
do not accept infants; and few programs are set up to accommodate
parents who work nonstandard hours.
-
Supply
of state-subsidized care Waiting lists for
subsidized care are long: over 13,000 children were
waiting for assistance in February 1998, according
to the Office of Child Care Services. The demand for
subsidized care is growing as more families move off
of welfare and into the work force. (10)
-
Supply
of school-age care With only 41,000 licensed
school-age slots and a statewide elementary school
popu lation of nearly 500,000 kids, Massachusetts
is experiencing an after-school care crisis (2,6).
Despite efforts by the Boston School Age Child Care
project and its many partners to increase school-age
care, the Boston MOST Com munity Assessment found
that the current supply of programs serves only 5.7%
of the city's 5- to 12-year-olds.
-
Location
of child care services Although an overwhelming
majority of parents prefer child care near home, that
need is hard to satisfy in some communities. Research
confirms that a community's income level determines
the amount of child care available. The Commonwealth's
high income communities are better served than its
poor communities. For example, one community-by-community
analysis found licensed capacity in Newton adequate
to serve 73% of Newton's population of birth through
4-year-olds; while only 23% of Lynn's children in
this age group could be accommodated in licensed programs
(11).
Source: Early Childhood Policy Group, Heller
Graduate School, Brandeis University
| Affordability
of Child Care |
The
past 20 years have seen a sharp rise in income inequality
in Massachusetts, with poor families growing poorer, wealthy
families becoming richer, and middle -income families barely
holding their own. The state's poorest families with children
earned an average of only about $10,500 per year in the
mid-1990s, while middle-income families averaged about $47,000
(12). For all families except those at the top of the economic
ladder (average income $132,000), paying for child care
is a heavy burden.
The
cost of child care is determined by type of care, child's
age, location of the program, and quality of care. Because
of required child to staff ratios, infant and toddler care
is more expensive than preschool and after-school care.
Center-based care is often more expensive than home-based
care. Cost also varies from town to town and neighborhood
to neighbor hood in Massachusetts.
In
the City of Boston, for example, the average annual cost
for one infant in full-time care ranges from $10,500 in
East Boston to $15,100 per year in Back Bay/Beacon Hill,
according to a recent study. The cost burden is also unequally
distributed: average annual income for households with children
in East Boston is $26,500 per year, while in Back Bay/Beacon
Hill it is $136,800 per year (13).
|
Costs
for One Preschool Child as a Percentage of Income
in Selected Boston Neighborhoods if
Parents Paid the Full Cost
|
|
Percent
of
Income
|
 |
|
Average
Annual Income
|
 |
Source: Boston EQUIP Inventory,
1997
To
offset the high cost of care, the state subsidizes spaces
through contracts with child care and early education programs
and makes vouchers available to low-income parents. Subsidized
care for preschoolers is also available in Head Start programs
and state-funded prekindergarten programs. Subsidized care
is available to parents re-entering the workforce from welfare,
working parents who earn less than 50% of the state's median
income, and families with spe cial needs. Eligible families
may choose a licensed child care program or an informal
child care provider. Informal care provided by a relative
or neighbor is reimbursed at the rate of roughly $2 per
hour. Some of those who use this inexpen sive option may
be doing so because they have no other choice.
What
should parents expect from a good child care program? Research
(13) suggests that in high quality settings:
-
Staff
are nurturing and turnover is low.
-
Caregivers
have specialized training and are reasonably well
paid.
-
Child-to-staff
ratios are low.
-
Activities
are plentiful and age-appropriate.
-
-
Physical
facilities are attractive and safe.
-
Parents
are involved in many ways.
| Quality
Care is Linked to Wages, Benefits and Training |
Child
care workers are one of the highest educated and lowest
paid groups in the work force. Their real (inflation adusted)
income has not risen since the late 1980s, and fully 93%
earn less than people with equivalent training in other
fields (4). Even though Massachusetts ranks relatively high
nationally, full-time pay for center-based teachers averages
only $17,000 annually (2).
Family
child care providers may earn even less, and they face a
further challenge: because they generally work alone, they
find themselves socially isolated. Not surprisingly, annual
worker turnoveran esti mated 35% in Massachusettsis nearly
3 times the rate for businesses as a whole and nearly 5
times the rate for public school teachers (14).
Caregivers
have few opportunities for professional development. Where
training does exist, incentives to participate are few,
costs are often extremely high, and few programs offer series
of courses linked to professional advancement (14). Only
rarely are teachers paid for time spent in such courses
or even in staff meetings.
|
Average
Wages of Boston Teachers and Child Care Providors,
1995
|
| Boston
Public School Teachers |
$32,000
|
| Centers
and Head Start Teachers |
$19,000
|
| School
Age Child Care Teachers |
$17,250
|
| Family
Child Care Providers |
$14,000
|
Source: Boston EQUIP Inventory,
1997
| Lack
of Adequate Facilities Compromises Quality Care |
Many
center-based providers locate their programs wherever they
can find inexpensive or donated spacechurch basements, surplus
classrooms. A recent Boston EQUIP study (13) found that
62% of center-based and Head Start programs operate in facilities
that were not originally designed for child care. In 1997,
child care centers statewide averaged 93% of capacity, leaving
little space to serve new children.
High
real estate costs are preventing providers from opening
new sites, but unlike many states, Massachusetts does not
provide specific funds for capital financing. In addition,
an estimated 500 child care centers in Massachusetts are
in need of significant repair. In Boston alone, 20% of child
care centers close from 1 to 3 days each year because of
a problem with the building.
| Strategies
to Improve Accessibility, Affordability, and Quality |
Even
though every dollar Massachusetts spends on quality child
care saves $7 in remedial education, criminal justice, and
welfare costs, the state spends a mere $1.18 out of every
$100 of tax revenues on child care services. In 1994, for
example, Massachusetts spent 5 times as much on prisons
as on child care, 11 times as much on highways, and 10 times
as much on higher education (15).
Families
with kids in college expect and receive government aid:
consumers across the nation typically pay only 23% of the
costs of higher education. In contrast, families with young
children, who are usually less well-off financially than
families with older children, typically pay 60% of early
child care costs (16).
While
Massachusetts commits more resources to child care than
many other states (15) , it must increase
its investment so that working parents can be assured that
their children are safe and secure. Massachusetts must make
a commitment to improve:
| You
Can Make A Difference! |
For
information on how you can get involved in building Massachusetts
resources for children, contact the following organizations:
Massachusetts
Campaign for Children (a public education and mobilization
ini tiative that is building an informed and active citizen
constituency for children in Massachusetts) 14 Beacon Street,
Suite 706, Boston, MA 02108; 617-742-8555; mail@masskids.org.
Parents
United for Child Care (a multiracial, grassroots
organization of low and moderate income parents committed
to increasing quality, affordable child care in Massachusetts)
30 Winter Street, 7th floor, Boston, MA 02108; 617-426-8288;
ace@pucc.com
Boston
EQUIP/Associated Day Care Services (a collaboration
of Boston's childhood care and education community that
strives to enhance child care quality by focusing on accreditation,
training, salaries, parent engage ment, and facilities)
95 Berkeley Street, Suite 306, Boston, MA 02116; 617-695-0700;
jsachs@channel1.user1.com
This
report was prepared by Massachusetts KIDS COUNT, a statewide
child data project of the Massachusetts Committee for Children
and Youth, and the Massachusetts Advocacy Center, funded
by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, with assistance from the
Early Childhood Policy Group, Heller Graduate School, Brandeis
University.
(c)1998
Permission to reproduce text protions of this report is
granted provided Massachsuetts Kids Count 1998 is cited.
---------------------------------
NOTES:
-
Estimate base on 1997 Data Book population data and US
Bureau of Labor Statistics figures on working families.
-
Massachusetts Child Care Resource and Referral Network
(1998). Child Care Data Report: FY'97.
-
Barnett, W. Stephen (Winter 1995). "Long-Term Effects
of Early Childhood Programs on Cognitive and School Outcomes,"
The Future of Children: Long-Term Outcomes of Early
Childhood Programs. Los Altos, CA: Center for the
Future of Children, David and Lucile Packard Foundation.
-
Helburn, Suzanne W. & Howes, Carollee (Summer/Fall
1996). "Child Care Cost and Quality," The
Future of Children: Financing Child Care. Los Altos,
CA: Center for the Future of Children, David and Lucille
Packard Foundation.
-
Sum, Andrew, et al. (1996). The State of the American
Dream in New England. Boston: The Massachusetts Institute
for a New Commonwealth.
-
Annie E. Casey Foundation (1997). Kids Count Data Book:
State Profiles of Child Well-Being.
-
Hayghe, Howard V. (September 1997). "Developments
in Women's Labor Force Participation," Monthly
Labor Review, pp. 41-46.
-
Data supplied by the Early Childhood Policy Group, Heller
Graduate School, Brandeis University.
-
Children's Defense Fund (November 1997). Special Report:
After-School Time.
-
Kirby, Gretchen G., et al. (1997). Income Support and
Social Services for Low-Income People in Massachusetts.
Washington, DC: The Urban Institute.
-
Data supplied by the Early Childhood Policy Group, Heller
Graduate School, Brandeis University.
-
Larin, Kathryn & McNichol, Elizabeth C. (1997). Pulling
Apart: A State-by-State Analysis of Income Trends.
Washington, DC: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
-
Boston Equip Inventory, 1997.
-
Carnegie Task Force on Meeting the Needs of Young Children
(1994). Starting Points: Meeting the Needs of our Youngest
Children. New York: Carnegie Corporation of New York.
-
Adams, Gina & Poersch, Nicole O. (1996). Who Cares?
State Commitment to Child Care and Early Education.
Washington, DC: Children's Defense Fund.
- Mitchell,
Anne, Stoney, Louise, & Dichter, Harriet (1997). Financing
Child Care in the United States: An Illustrative Catalog
of Current Strategies. The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation
and The Pew Charitable Trust.
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