Families across the country are feeling crushed by the struggle to find affordable, quality childcare. Last week, New Mexico met the moment, announcing that it would be the first state in the nation to offer no-cost universal childcare to all of its residents. Roosevelt’s Lena Bilik spoke to USA Today and wrote for the Roosevelt blog about this historic step.
“In a time of overwhelmingly untenable costs for Americans, childcare is among the most urgent cost-of-living issues,” Bilik writes. In offering childcare to all, New Mexico is treating the basic need as what it is: essential public infrastructure. In July, Roosevelt and our partners at Community Change released a report outlining the foundational principles that should undergird a system of universal public childcare, informed by numerous discussions with childcare providers, parents, and grassroots community organizers.
New Mexico’s plan meets many of the needs expressed by participants in that study. The state intends to address the childcare shortage by making supply-side investments in constructing, expanding, and renovating childcare facilities, as well as by investing in the workforce and offering higher wages. “The reality is, this is not a family-sustaining job right now, to be a childcare provider,” Bilik told USA Today. “And that's a huge part of why there's not enough childcare.”
New Mexico is also targeting its initial outreach to infants, toddlers, low-income families, and children with disabilities. But that doesn’t mean the program is limited to any group. “Many of the stakeholders we spoke to referenced the need to combine the principle of true universality with a rollout that would prioritize children and families with the highest needs,” Bilik writes. As one research participant had put it, “Stop figuring out who to deny, and start figuring out ways to get children and families on the program.”
The future of childcare in New Mexico will provide exciting and important lessons to the rest of the country. But Bilik notes that relying only on state-level innovations will leave millions of families behind. “Not every state has this level of funding ability,” she writes. “A patchwork of state policies on childcare is therefore not equitable, let alone sustainable.”
That’s why, ultimately, building a truly universal childcare system is a job for the federal government: because public power, when used right, can mobilize resources across the nation and provide a good life for all people. Bilik concludes: “Federal lawmakers should take a page out of New Mexico’s book and finally deliver national childcare for all.”
Read the blog post: “New Mexico Offers Free Childcare for All. The Federal Government Should Follow Suit.”
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