Article: Working Families are Struggling with Child Care Costs

by | July 8, 2015

Home 9 Early Care and Education 9 Article: Working Families are Struggling with Child Care Costs ( Page 12 )

Wages minus childcare costs equals complex problem for Madison’s working families,” according to Madison Magazine in its July 2015 article, Childcare costs pinch working families. Meeting the costs of child care is often out of reach for parents, and high-quality programs struggle to sustain their standards.

The extensive look at child care in Madison includes interviews with working parents, child care administrators, policy analysts, and policymakers. Here’s a sample of quotes:

“Wisconsin Shares is a free-market voucher system that sadly ignores the market.”George Hagenauer, 4-C

“….decline in childcare funding has had a particularly negative impact on working low-income parents struggling to support their families and prepare their children for school.”Dave Edie, WCCF

“If you want to pay your staff more, you have to raise your rates. But you can’t raise your rates because if all providers tried to pay the staff comparable to what other workers are making … no one could afford to have their children in childcare.”Ruth Schmidt, WECA

It’s an interesting read, examining the child care world from several perspectives, including a Department of Children and Families spokesperson, Monica Host at the City of Madison, Jen Bailey director of Head Start and Early Head Start at Dane County Parent Council, Wendy Rakower at Red Caboose, Abbie Kruse at The Playing Field, and Kaleem Caire at One City Early Learning Centers.

The child care challenges in Madison are similar to other communities all across Wisconsin, except that Madison has probably invested more to solve the problems than any other community in the state.

Dave Edie

Kids Forward
Kids Forward

Join us to build a Wisconsin where every child and family thrives.

Recent

Our Take: The Wisconsin 2023-25 Biennial Budget

Our Take: The Wisconsin 2023-25 Biennial Budget

We appreciate Governor Evers being a stop gap for some of the most egregious proposals from the Republican-controlled Joint Finance Committee (JFC). But, if we want to actually address Wisconsin’s racial disparities, we have a lot more work to do.

Proposed Tax Cut Privileges Wealthiest 1%, Leaves Struggling Families Behind

Proposed Tax Cut Privileges Wealthiest 1%, Leaves Struggling Families Behind

Wisconsin can be a place where we all—regardless of race or place—have what we need to make ends meet. However, last week the Republican-controlled Joint Finance Committee voted for a tax cut that would aid in gutting supports for families. Letting Wisconsin’s wealthiest off the hook from paying what they owe means many struggling families are left behind, particularly children and families of color and those furthest from opportunity. We are calling on Governor Evers to stand up for everyday families and veto this tax cut for the wealthy few.

Sign up for Emails

Your address helps us identify your legislators and the most relevant messages to send you.