July 21, 2020
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Dueling Congressional Plans to Bailout US Childcare

By now, the fact that childcare is in crisis is not new. But as the weeks creep by it is crystallizing as one of the signal problems of the pandemic lockdowns. Without childcare, which includes open K-12 schools, parents, child care workers, day care providers, and a host of others have been deeply affected. Parents who work from home, especially mothers, have two jobs now. Essential workers don’t have even that luxury and have the increased worry of exposing their children or family members to coronavirus. Daycare providers, domestic and childcare workers have watched their industry, one which relies heavily on low-wage black and brown labor, crater. This is the domino that affects nearly every other aspect of a potential recovery (if the US was even in a position to think about economic recovery as cases continue to surge all over). The long and short is the outlook is grim.

Now, as Congress prepares to reconvene and wrangle over a new set of stimulus payments, a boost to the childcare industry is front and center. Both the GOP and Democrats have plans for a path forward for childcare and school reopening, but they clash on many fundamentals. The GOP plan, called Back to Work Child Care Grants Act would, as the name suggests, rely on federal grants administered by the Department of Health and Human Services which would identify “qualified child care providers” and disburse funds based on need, according to Law360

However, Democratic leadership, while acknowledging that there is widespread consensus on the importance of righting the childcare ship, argued that the GOP plan misses the boat. The Democrats’ own plan, Child Care Is Essential Act, seeks to provide $50 billion to the childcare industry, also mainly disbursed through grants by the DHHS. 

In a Tuesday op-ed in the New York Times, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren singled childcare out as one of the key aspects of any healthy recovery. Warren has previously argued for a universal childcare policy, but for the time being, the best we can hope for is a stop-gap bailout of the largely privatized childcare industry, rather than a radical reform of a system that has be woefully inadequate for decades as traditional forms of mutual aid, child care and education have been eroded or privatized.

It is clear that without significant action, the repercussions of lack of childcare will be felt in the workplace, as parents - especially mothers - continue to try and care for their children while maintaining full-time work, without structural help or protections for either role.

As President, Joe Biden Can Protect Workers

November 19, 2020
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In a new blog post at the Institute for New Economic Thinking, professors David Michaels and Gregory Wagner lay out an 11-point overview of a longer policy paper that they believe president-elect Joe Biden can enact on day one in office to protect workers

Historic Victory for Paid Family Leave in Colorado

November 12, 2020
Paid Family Leave
While much of the post-election attention has been focused on the presidential race, there has been little said about what looks to be a historic victory for working Coloradans, who have chosen to join eight other states, including New York, and Washington D.C. in providing paid family leave for new parents as well as those dealing with a family emergency. This is the first paid family leave law to be won through a ballot initiative, rather than implemented by elected officials.

Pandemic Continues to Affect Women, Even the Really Successful Ones

November 10, 2020
Gender Discrimination
This reduction in childcare due to COVID is affecting mothers of all income brackets, and as NPR reports, the most successful women, even, are feeling the effects. Mothers remain the parent more likely to shore the care gap created by school closures and are more likely to step back from their careers to do so.

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