Dani Carlin opened a St. Paul day-care center in June, just three months after President Joe Biden directed billions of federal dollars to shore up America's broken child care system.
Carlin was assigned a child-care quality coach, receives licensing training and now gets a monthly $430 subsidy check to help cover the costs of masks, disinfectants and food for the six toddlers attending Carlin's Little Naturalists preschool — all because of the way the state of Minnesota chose to spend the federal aid.
With unprecedented pandemic aid from the federal government, plus additional state funds, Minnesota has developed emergency and long-term strategies aimed at saving an industry in trouble. The state has done as much or more than others to stabilize centers that were facing trouble even before COVID-19.
But even with the progress, a host of child-care advocates, industry and business leaders say more progress is needed, from expanding aid for low-income parents to solidifying some emergency funding measures.
Stopping child-care providers from leaving the industry — and filling the care gap — is crucial. In 2021 alone, Minnesota lost a net 494 in-home child-care businesses, eliminating slots for 10,217 children, according to Minnesota's Department of Human Services. Exacerbating those losses is a shortage of child-care workers, adding further stresses to centers still open.
That's why the aid for new providers like Carlin is a key component of proposals.
For example, an extra, "one time" $1,400 supplemental grant arrived in the mail last month, just as several of Carlin's clients suffered COVID-related setbacks and were late paying their $270-a-week bills.
With all the support, Carlin plans to double the number of children Little Naturalists serves later this year and hopes to add some children from low-income families for the first time.