ExchangeEveryDay Past Issues
<< Previous Issue
|
View Past Issues | |
Next Issue >>
October 18, 2022
When you do nothing you feel overwhelmed and powerless. But when you get involved you feel the sense of hope and accomplishment that comes from knowing you are working to make things better.
-Maya Angelou, American Poet and Activist, 1928 – 2014
In the small town of Condon, Oregon, Jeanine Conboy closes her center for five days a year, to provide professional development for her staff—an investment in quality care. With the entire town dependent on Conboy’s program, “that means our public transportation department doesn’t run that day, according to Elizabeth Farrar Campbell, the county judge and commission chair, “We are so interconnected.”
Testifying before the US House Budget Committee, Rasheed Malik of the Center for American Progress stated, “the numerous benefits to high-quality child care that decades of academic and policy research have identified…fall into three categories: 1) family and health benefits; 2) children’s educational benefits; and 3) broad-based economic benefits. I would highlight the fact that benefits are usually proportional to the quality and intensity of the child care benefits that are studied.”
However, an estimated 10% of child care programs had to shut their doors during the pandemic, leaving an increase in child care ‘deserts,’ especially in rural areas, according to Child Care Aware of America. Half of US residents now live in communities where less than a third of children have access to a slot in licensed care. As Corona Virus Relief Funds are spent down, other solutions are needed. Low pay and benefits can’t compete with other sectors, while increasing wages leads to costs for families that compete with rent or mortgages.
Rethink early childhood finance in an Engaging Exchange with Karen Foster-Jorgensen on Tuesday, October 25, at 7 pm US eastern time.
What is ExchangeEveryDay?
ExchangeEveryDay is the official electronic newsletter for Exchange Press. It is delivered five days a week containing news stories, success stories, solutions, trend reports, and much more.
Comments (1)
Displaying 1 CommentEugene, OR, United States
We received this important feedback on today's EED from a "long time desert dweller and early childhood educator:"
"Hello,
I live in the Sonoran Desert. I know as do many others that the desert is a place of beauty, innovation, and strength.
I would like to suggest that your referral to geographies with certain characteristics as child care "deserts" (perhaps implying scarcity) is misguided and inaccurate.
In short, please resist the socially prevailing stereotype that a desert is not desirable and work toward a more accurate description of what you really want to convey.
Thank you"
Really, thank YOU for constantly keeping us aware and helping us to be more thoughtful. You are absolutely right, and this has been pointed out, including in Exchange Magazine, when we featured Spaces of Opportunity on the cover. In it, Virginia Ángeles-Wann asks that we not talk of food deserts, but of desert food, which has always been there for those who are in kinship with their environment. The article I quoted in the EED above used the phrase, but I should have known better than to repeat it!
Post a Comment