An ‘important step forward’: In a unanimous vote, San Diego County directs more funds toward child care

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News Date
09/13/23
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Article by  Emily Alvarenga | Read full article in the Del Mar Times

an Diego County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously Tuesday to start putting their recently released child-care blueprint into action with an injection of federal funds.

The motion proposed by Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer and Chair Nora Vargas will dedicate additional funding to licensing and infrastructure needs for child-care providers, allowing them to serve more children.

It will also create a pilot program to give county workers up to three paid days off for emergency child care.

The blueprint unveiled earlier this year outlines how the county plans to address some of the industry’s issues by helping current providers, creating a pipeline of new ones and hiring and training staff to provide quality care.

“As a county we have a responsibility to do everything we can to fix a system that is not working for the families in the communities we represent,” Lawson-Remer said.

Lawson-Remer said although Tuesday’s vote was a big win for parents, children and child-care providers across the region, it is only one step in the right direction.

“Taking this important step forward will not only benefit our region this year, but for many years to come,” she said. “We are building long-term capacity in child care, its workforce and giving greater support to our essential workers.”

The allocation will use federal funding set aside for child care during the pandemic — just as states are expected to face a steep decline once federal funding runs out Sept. 30.

As a result of the federal funds expiring, an estimated 70,000 child-care programs — about one in three — could close, according to a study by the Century Foundation. Some 3.2 million children nationwide could lose care, the study concluded.

Already, the county estimates that 77 percent of parents struggle to find caregivers for their children, Lawson-Remer said. Many licensed providers have lengthy wait lists, and large swaths of the county are child-care deserts, with space for only a fraction of the young children who need them.

Most of the two dozen or more people who spoke at the hearing Tuesday supported the investment.

Those in opposition voiced concerns about government involvement in private business or said the funding could be better spent on issues like homelessness.

The county has already been using funds to expand child-care capacity at facilities across the county, funding both infrastructure improvements as well as an increase in staffing and training.

Tuesday’s motion will inject additional funds to enhance the infrastructure needs for new and existing child-care providers and family child-care homes in under-served areas.

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