By Liz Bell

Education NC

Legislators return this week for their last session before state child care stabilization funds run out at the end of December, and advocates are requesting a one-time allocation of $100 million to avoid closures and price hikes for parents.

Rep. Donny Lambeth, R-Forsyth, said in June that he expected legislators to allocate more child care funding before the end of the year. But Lambeth said last Tuesday that he now does not expect the legislature to provide any new funding until next year’s long session.

headshot of older white man with mustache and glasses
Rep. Donny Lambeth (R-Winston-Salem) Image courtesy of the NC General Assembly website

“It is unlikely the GA will deal with any new appropriations until the 2025 GA convenes next year,” Lambeth wrote in an email. “This is being looked at closely with staff but we need to evaluate alternates to just adding more funds. We have been evaluating those options and talking to colleagues in other states to see what they do.”

Advocates are asking for the one-time funding to sustain families and child care programs until legislators convene next year to craft a budget.

“We know that folks can’t afford to wait until next June for there to be an answer to this crisis,” said Chanelle Croxton, director of state strategies and organizing for the National Domestic Workers Alliance.

‘Already a big problem’

In the coming months, a lack of state action would leave programs without extra funding they have been using to maintain teachers’ wages and keep tuition rates from increasing. A survey in February found that the end of stabilization funding would lead to the closure of about 20 percent of the state’s child care facilities within a year.

The funding had been scheduled to end at the start of July 2024, and advocates asked for $200 million in one-time funding over the summer. The legislature in June allocated $67.5 million to send to licensed child care centers and family child care homes, replacing 75 percent of what programs had been receiving through federal dollars from the American Rescue Plan Act since 2021.

Before the new funding reached programs, the state experienced a net loss of 69 programs from July to mid-September, a 1.4 percent decrease in the number of licensed programs.

An October report from advocacy nonprofit NC Child and the state Department of Commerce found that one in five employers cited child care issues as a barrier to hiring. It also found there were 100,000 fewer working-age parents with young children participating in the labor force in 2023 than in 2019.

Neil Harrington, NC Child’s research director, said the exhaustion of the state funds at the end of December will likely exacerbate these economic consequences.

“You’ll see more parents not be able to access child care, which might impact their ability to work, and our reports from this year show that’s already a big problem,” Harrington said.

He mentioned another report, released in June by NC Child and the state and national Chamber of Commerce Foundations, which found that 25 percent of working parents had experienced a job disruption in the past year because of child care issues.

“Without that stabilization grant funding, and as we approach that cliff, if we go over it and more providers close, you’ll see that number increase even more,” Harrington said.

‘Some of the most important work that there is’

A lot has changed since programs started receiving federal stabilization funding in 2021, said Lynquay Harrison, owner and operator of Open Arms Child Care of NC, a family child care home in Wendell.

“It doesn’t add up,” Harrison said. “The mortgage went up because the property value went up. My taxes went up, water went up, electricity went up, food went up. With subsidized care, you only want me to charge a parent about $195 a week, really? I mean, that’s one week of groceries.”

The child care industry is described by experts as a market failure, meaning that it’s impossible for child care businesses to produce the desired product, high-quality care, at a rate that is affordable to most parents. That leaves care unaffordable for many while child care teachers make some of the lowest wages of any industry.

Most programs have used the stabilization funds, first from the federal government and then from the state, to boost teacher compensation.

Harrison also used the funding to cover fees for parents getting child care through the state’s subsidy program.

“The funds helped me to help parents who are in those type of situations,” Harrison said.

Creative Commons License

Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license.

This story was reported by EducationNC, (www.ednc.org) a North Carolina-based nonprofit news source focusing on the state's educational system.