[Congressional Bills 117th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1036 Introduced in House (IH)]
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117th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 1036
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that all young
children and families should have access to high-quality, affordable
childcare and early education.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 6, 2022
Ms. Bonamici (for herself, Ms. Clark of Massachusetts, Ms. Speier, Mr.
Ruppersberger, Mr. Bishop of Georgia, Ms. Norton, Mr. Bowman, Ms.
Williams of Georgia, Ms. Jacobs of California, Mrs. Hayes, Mrs. McBath,
Mr. Moulton, Mr. Jones, Mr. Pocan, Ms. Velazquez, Ms. Adams, Mr.
Cardenas, Mrs. Cherfilus-McCormick, Ms. Clarke of New York, Ms. Newman,
and Ms. Lois Frankel of Florida) submitted the following resolution;
which was referred to the Committee on Education and Labor
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that all young
children and families should have access to high-quality, affordable
childcare and early education.
Whereas today's working parents depend on high-quality childcare so they can
work and support their families;
Whereas approximately 15,700,000 children under five are in a regular childcare
arrangement;
Whereas even before the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States economy lost
$57,000,000,000,000 annually in unrealized earnings, productivity, and
revenue because of the childcare crisis;
Whereas the Department of Health and Human Services recommends that no more than
7 percent of household income go toward childcare payments; however,
middle-income families spend as much as 14 percent on childcare and low-
income families spend approximately 35 percent of their income on
childcare;
Whereas childcare is difficult to find for millions of families, when only 8
percent of childcare centers can provide evening, overnight, or weekend
care, and approximately 58 percent of low-income children younger than 6
years old whose parents work nontraditional hours;
Whereas the need for care can dramatically exceed the supply in areas designated
as childcare deserts;
Whereas more than 50 percent of American families live in childcare deserts,
including every county in Oregon which is a childcare desert for infant
and toddler care;
Whereas, between 2010 and 2020, the cost of childcare increased by 25 percent;
Whereas families of color face income gaps that make high-quality childcare even
less affordable for the parents and guardians of Black, Indigenous, and
other children of color;
Whereas high-quality childcare and early education, especially for disadvantaged
children, such as Head Start and Early Head Start, help children thrive
in school and beyond;
Whereas high-quality childcare improves children's early learning, cognitive and
language development, and social and emotional development during the
earliest years of foundational brain development;
Whereas the eligibility requirements to receive assistance under the Child Care
and Development Block Grant Act of 1990 (CCDBG), the primary source of
Federal funding support, exclude most American children from Federal
childcare assistance;
Whereas CCDBG serves only a fraction of families, with just one in nine eligible
children under age six receiving Federal childcare assistance;
Whereas these issues affect all families, but disproportionately affect women,
many of whom are unable to enter the workforce due to the lack of
affordable, high-quality childcare for their children;
Whereas the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the average hourly wage of
childcare workers is $12.24;
Whereas the vast majority of the childcare workforce is comprised of women,
overwhelmingly women of color;
Whereas Black childcare providers earn an average of 78 cents less per hour than
their White counterparts;
Whereas increased pay for workers in the childcare and early education sectors
improves the quality and continuity of care for young children, helps
centers hire new staff and improve conditions for children, and reflects
the value of caregivers' highly skilled work;
Whereas a survey from the National Association for the Education of Young
Children found 4 in 5 childcare centers are understaffed;
Whereas to recruit and retain a qualified childcare workforce for young
children, childcare and preschool workers with equivalent education and
experience should be paid as much as K-12 staff;
Whereas a full-time living wage is needed for all childcare workers to meet
their families' essential needs, yet nearly half of childcare workers
currently receive Federal income assistance to support their families'
well-being;
Whereas the Office of the Inspector General for the Department of Health and
Human Services found that in 96 percent of unannounced site visits in 9
States and 1 territory, there were 1 or more instances of potentially
hazardous conditions and noncompliance with critical health and safety
requirements;
Whereas the National Children's Facilities Network estimates that at least
$23,000,000,000 is needed to bring existing facilities up to best
practice standards;
Whereas expansion and renovation of facilities will improve child health and
expand opportunities for employment in the care economy, but there is no
dedicated Federal program to invest in upgrading care facilities;
Whereas high-quality childcare that works for everyone is essential for a strong
economy and future, and working families also need universal preschool;
Whereas areas with new universal preschool programs have shown dramatic
increases, as high as ten percent, in maternal labor force
participation;
Whereas universal preschool programs for three- and four-year-olds provide a
particularly important opportunity for fostering racial and
socioeconomic diversity because they allow students of all backgrounds
to enroll for free;
Whereas for every $1 invested in universal preschool, $9 in benefits, including
better child health and increased earnings, is returned to the economy;
Whereas when families are guaranteed high-quality, flexible, available, and
affordable childcare and early childhood education, business
productivity improves, parents have a greater likelihood of finding and
keeping employment, and children do better in school and in life;
Whereas fixing the childcare system is also an issue of racial justice;
Whereas making sure families of color have access to high-quality, affordable
childcare and preschool will help dismantle the systemic underinvestment
in families and workers of color;
Whereas the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated existing problems in childcare and
created new challenges, including providing safe emergency care while
providers are struggling with significant reductions in revenue;
Whereas, according to a 2022 study conducted by Child Care Aware of America,
16,000 childcare providers permanently closed between December 2019 and
March 2021; and
Whereas an analysis by the Center for American Progress estimated that, without
adequate public support, 4,500,000 childcare slots could be lost
permanently: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives should pass robust
childcare legislation that will stabilize the childcare industry and
that will--
(1) provide childcare assistance to all families that need
it, especially low- and middle-income families who struggle to
afford the cost of high-quality childcare and who are too often
left behind;
(2) make childcare affordable, with no family having to pay
more than 7 percent of their income for childcare, and families
most in need paying nothing;
(3) make sure that childcare is available so that parents
in today's 24-hour economy can access high-quality care when
and where they need it, during weekends, nights, and as their
job schedules change, with options in a mixed-delivery system
across school, center, and home settings;
(4) guarantee that all families eligible for childcare will
receive it, by investing in the expansion of childcare supply
and creating a system that is appropriately funded to meet the
need of America's families;
(5) improve the quality of childcare by guaranteeing
childcare workers a living wage and wage parity with K-12 staff
for those with equivalent education and experience, by
improving training opportunities, by investing in long overdue
infrastructure upgrades to childcare facilities, and by giving
workers a voice on the job to advocate for higher workplace
standards and standards of care for the children they serve;
(6) expand access to full-day, full-school year Head Start
services, including Early Head Start, and high-quality,
universal preschool; and
(7) provide sufficient Federal investment to make sure
resources for both high-quality jobs and affordable childcare.
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