Neal joins Clark, House Members in Urging Congress to Include Emergency Child Care Legislation in Next COVID-19 Stimulus
Washington, DC,
August 5, 2020
Today, Congresswoman Katherine Clark (MA-5), Vice Chair of the House Democratic Caucus, joined with Reps. Rosa DeLauro (CT-3), Richard Neal (MA-1), Danny K. Davis (IL-7), Marcia L. Fudge (OH-11), Suzanne Bonamici (OR-1), Jahana Hayes (CT-5), Jimmy Panetta (CA-20) and 59 other members of Congress to call for the inclusion of both the Child Care is Essential Act and the Child Care for Economic Recovery Act in the next Coronavirus supplemental package. The two bills were passed by the House of Representatives last week and would improve access to affordable, quality child care for working families and support a robust economic recovery from the COVID-19 crisis through the creation of a $50 billion Child Care Stabilization Fund and other critical federal investments and tax subsidies. “Child care is too essential to fail. The upcoming stimulus must invest in child care so that we can stabilize and secure American families and our economy,” wrote the Members. “In order for our economy to recover, and for working families to return to work, the next supplemental package must include at least $50 billion in immediate child care stabilization funds and long-term investments to ensure access to quality, affordable child care for workers. The House passed H.R. 7027, the Child Care is Essential Act and H.R. 7327, the Child Care for Economic Recovery Act in a bipartisan manner. This was a monumental first step. Passing those bills as part of the upcoming stimulus package must be a top priority so that we can begin the hard work of rebuilding and revitalizing our future.” The COVID-19 recession has had a devastating impact on the child care industry, our economy, and working parents. Since March 2020, 60 percent of all child care providers across the nation were forced to shutter completely and have lost months of revenue. Now, 70% of all child care centers are incurring substantial, additional costs for staff, cleaning supplies, and personal protective equipment. This dramatic shortfall in revenue has disrupted the nation’s child care sector to such an extent that the National Association for the Education of Young Children estimates 40% of child care providers could close permanently without federal assistance. The letter was authored by Rep. Clark and co-signed by 67 members of the House. The full text of the letter is available here. A fact sheet on the Child Care is Essential Act can be found here. A fact sheet on the Child Care for Economic Recovery Act can be found here. ### |