Rural Wisconsin Sees Dramatic Drop in Children Served by Wisconsin Shares

by | December 9, 2015

Home 9 Early Care and Education 9 Rural Wisconsin Sees Dramatic Drop in Children Served by Wisconsin Shares ( Page 4 )

WCCF has been analyzing the significant decline of children enrolled in the Wisconsin Shares child care subsidy program. This blog looks at two significant trends:

  • Statewide drop in children served: An extraordinary drop overall drop of 13,566 children, a 23% drop from 2009-2014.
  • The smaller the county the greater the drop in children served: The decline in children served gets steeper from the most populous counties to the least populous counties (from a 19% drop to a 54% drop). Children served by tribes also show a steep decline (44%).

                                                   23% Statewide Decline

rural graph

Analysis of decline of children enrolled in Wisconsin Shares by counties and tribes

County analysis: Further analysis finds that the smaller the county (in population) the greater the decline. The 15 most populous counties have experienced a 19% drop and the percent decline gets greater, the smaller the county. The least populous counties show a whopping decline of 54%.

 

county chart

table 2

Note: The calculations above are based on average children per month in each year.

For reference, see list of Wisconsin counties by population go to: list of Wisconsin counties by population

Why is there such a steep decline in children enrolled in Wisconsin Shares?

We can only speculate on possible causes. Here are some trends that may have a particularly large impact on more rural areas:

  • A decline in family child care programs in general may be leading to fewer regulated care available, particularly certified family child care (over a 70% drop) and licensed family child care (over a 30% drop). Families in rural areas are more likely to use family child care programs.
  • More expectations for child care programs from YoungStar.
  • Reduced Wisconsin Shares payments with the rate freeze, the 5% cut for 2-Star programs, and paying only for attended days for family child care.

Readers: Do you have other explanations?

Dave Edie, WCCF Early Education Policy Analyst

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

Recent

“I Speak” Cards

“I Speak” Cards

Language access services are a shared responsibility among various entities, including state agencies, local governments, healthcare providers, educational institutions, and other organizations that receive federal funding. “I Speak” cards or posters help individuals...

Sign up for Emails

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