From Kansas Office of the Governor <[email protected]>
Subject Governor Kelly Joins Fellow Governors in Urging Congress to Support Federal Child Care Investment
Date June 15, 2023 6:59 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
View as a webpage  /  Share [ [link removed] ]






Header
________________________________________________________________________



*For Immediate Release:    *     
June 15, 2023
          
*Contact:    *     
Cassie Nichols
[email protected]

*Governor Kelly Joins Fellow Governors
in Urging Congress to Support Federal
Child Care Investment*

*
TOPEKA* – Governor Laura Kelly has joined a group of governors in calling on Congress to protect and increase federal investment in child care in the upcoming Fiscal Year 2024 budget. Alongside governors from North Carolina, Colorado, Hawaii, Wisconsin, New Mexico, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Illinois, and Washington, she sent a letter to Congressional leaders urging them to provide the resources child care centers need to stay open and retain workers.

“Here in Kansas, we are working to make it possible for every Kansas family to find an affordable option for child care, but we can’t do it alone,” *said Governor Kelly.* “That’s why I’ve joined my fellow governors in urging Congress to make critical investments to support families and grow our workforce.”

Congress supplied one-time funding to aid child care during the pandemic, but the need for child care funding remains as important as ever. Nationally, there are roughly 90,000 fewer people in the child care industry today, a 9.7% decrease from February 2020, and 60% of rural Americans live in a “child care desert,” which are areas with an insufficient supply of licensed child care.

In Kansas, a lack of child care options hurts economic and workforce development, as 6% of Kansans who don’t work say it is because they cannot find affordable child care. According to a recent report [ [link removed] ], the average cost for a toddler in center-based child care in Kansas costs the median two-parent household 8% of its income and the median one-parent household 26% of its income.

“We urge bipartisan action to make this essential, recurring investment in our children, our economy, and the future of our country,” *the governors wrote.*

Governor Kelly has invested in child care as a vital component of workforce and economic development success. In 2022 she signed House Bill 2237, a bipartisan bill that expands child care tax credits that provide child care to employees, and announced $53 million in appreciation bonuses for eligible child care staff at licensed facilities.

Read the letter here [ [link removed] ].

*###*








Stay Connected with Kansas Office of the Governor: Facebook [ [link removed] ]  Twitter [ [link removed] ]  Visit our Website [ [link removed] ]  GovDelivery Signup [ [link removed] ]  SUBSCRIBER SERVICES:
Manage Subscriptions [ [link removed] ]  |  Unsubscribe All [ [link removed] ]  |  Help [ [link removed] ]
body .abe-column-block { min-height: 0px; }

________________________________________________________________________

This email was sent to [email protected] using govDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Kansas Office of the Governor · Capitol, 300 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 241S · Topeka, KS 66612-1590 GovDelivery logo [ [link removed] ]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis