Joe Biden

FACT SHEET: Biden-Harris Administration Announces American Rescue Plan Funding to Rescue the Child Care Industry so the Economy Can Recover

April 15, 2021

Today, the Biden Administration is announcing the release of $39 billion of American Rescue Plan funds to states, territories, and tribes to address the child care crisis caused by COVID-19. These funds will help early childhood educators and family child care providers keep their doors open. These providers have been on the frontlines caring for the children of essential workers and support parents, especially mothers, who want to get back to work. These funds are a critical step to pave the way for a strong economic recovery and a more equitable future.

Over the past 40 years, as more women entered the labor force and brought home larger paychecks, they have driven 91 percent of the income gains experienced by middle-class families. But, since the start of the COVID-19 public health emergency, roughly 2 million women have left the labor force, disproportionately due to caregiving needs and undoing decades of progress improving women's labor force participation rate. Even as many fathers have returned to work, mothers, especially those without a four-year college degree, have not done so at similar rates. As a result, the gender earnings gap is predicted to increase by 5 percentage points in this recession, hurting our families and economy. As women work to regain employment, families with young children, and especially families of color where mothers are more likely to be sole or primary breadwinners, may face financial burdens for years to come. Parents need access to safe, quality child care to get back to work.

Source: Pandemic pushes mothers of young children out of the labor force | Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis (minneapolisfed.org)
At the same time, early childhood and child care providers – nearly all small businesses, overwhelmingly owned by women and disproportionately owned by people of color – have been hit hard by the pandemic and are struggling to continue to provide essential services. Providers have faced decreasing revenues due to lower enrollment while also shouldering higher expenses – 47 percent higher by one estimate – for personal protective equipment (PPE), sanitation, additional staff, and other needs to operate safely. They were already operating on extremely thin margins before the pandemic. According to one survey, as of December, about one in four child care providers open at the start of the pandemic were closed, hindering access to care, especially for families of color. These closures exacerbated access challenges that existed before the pandemic when half of all Americans lived in a child care desert. Child care providers who have stayed open have gone to enormous lengths to do so: two in five providers report taking on debt for their programs using personal credit cards to pay for increased costs and three in five work in programs that have reduced expenses through layoffs, furloughs, or pay cuts. One in six child care jobs, generally held by women of color, still haven't come back – much more than the one in twenty jobs that have been lost throughout the economy.

That is why President Biden prioritized addressing the child care crisis caused by COVID-19 as part of the American Rescue Plan. Today's $39 billion funding release will provide a lifeline to hundreds of thousands of childcare providers and early childhood educators, provide a safe and healthy learning environment for more than 5 million children, and help parents, especially mothers, get back to work. States, tribes, and territories can use these funds to:

  • Help hundreds of thousands child care centers and family child care providers, which are mostly very small businesses, stay open or reopen including by making rent or mortgage payments, helping with utility or insurance bills, maintaining or improving facilities, and paying off debt incurred during the pandemic.
  • Support providers with funds to enable safe and healthy learning environments for more than 5 million of children, including by purchasing masks, implementing physical distancing, improving ventilation, and cleaning consistently, so both centers and family providers can comply with CDC's Guidance for Operating Child Care Programs during COVID-19. This funding complements the President's efforts to prioritize early childhood educators for vaccination – child care workers remain eligible for vaccinations and nearly 80 percent of the educators who work with children from birth to 12th grade received at least their first shot of a COVID-19 vaccine during the month of March. Providers can also use these funds to support the mental health of both children and early educators so that they can meet any social and emotional needs exacerbated by the pandemic as centers reopen and parents go back to work.
  • Keep child care workers, disproportionately women of color and immigrants, on the payroll and rehire those who have been laid off. Child care workers are essential to meeting the child care needs of families and providing quality are to children, but providers have been forced to lay off, furlough, or reduce pay of workers to survive – exacerbating issues faced by a workforce that has long faced low pay and high turnover. Providers can use these funds to keep workers on payroll, rehire laid off workers and recruit new workers, and increase the pay and benefits of child care workers and family child care providers.
  • Provide families with the greatest need access to affordable care. States, tribes, and territories can provide direct subsidies to more than 800,000 hard-pressed families earning below 85% state median income and families performing essential work, to help cover the cost of care.
  • Start to lay the foundation for a stronger child care system, so families can access the high-quality care they need. As states, tribes, and territories address the immediate crisis, they can also make a down payment on President Biden's commitment to a stronger, more equitable early childhood education system. For example, states, tribes, and territories can set reimbursement rates at a level that will help children receive high-quality care and can increase access to care, including on the evenings and weekends when many essential workers need care.

The American Rescue Plan also included an historic increase in support for child care through the tax code, helping millions of working families afford needed care. Last year, a family claiming a Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit (CDCTC) got less than $700 on average towards the cost of care, and many low-income working families often got nothing. Thanks to the historic expansion of the CDCTC in the American Recovery Plan, a median income family with two kids under age 13 will receive up to $8,000 towards their child care expenses when they file taxes for 2021, compared with a maximum of $1,200 previously.

  • In 2020, the CDCTC provides a tax credit typically capped at $600 for one child, for families with at least $3,000 in eligible expenses, and capped at $1,200 for two children or more for families with at least $6,000 in child care expenses.
  • Under the American Rescue Plan's expansion of the CDCTC, all families with incomes below $125,000 will save up to half the cost of their eligible child care expenses, getting back up to $4,000 for one child and $8,000 for two or more children, when they file taxes for 2021. And, families making between $125,000 and $438,000 can receive a partial credit.
  • And for the first time, the CDCTC will be fully refundable, making the credit fairer by allowing low-income working families to receive the full value of the credit towards their eligible child care expenses regardless of how much they owe on their 2021 taxes.

In the coming weeks, the administration will release:

  • Guidance to states, tribes, and territories, while also providing technical assistance like webinars and peer-to-peer learning opportunities, to support states, tribes, and territories as they make historic investments in saving and rebuilding their child care systems, provide high-quality care to children, and get families back to work.
  • Frequently Asked Questions on the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit to equip parents with the information they need to claim the credit next year.

Help from the American Rescue Plan is coming to states, territories, and tribes. The $39 billion will be provided through two funds: (1) $24 billion in child care stabilization funding for child care providers to reopen or stay open, provide safe and healthy learning environments, keep workers on payroll, and provide mental health supports for educators and children, and (2) $15 billion in more flexible funding for states to make child care more affordable for more families, increase access to high-quality care for families receiving subsidies, increase compensation for early childhood workers, and meet other care needs in their states. A breakdown by state, tribe and territory is below.

 

  Child Care Development Fund Flexible Funding Child Care Stabilization Funding Total
TOTAL 14,960,830,000 23,975,000,000 38,935,830,000
STATES
Alabama 281,637,028 451,360,337 732,997,365
Alaska 28,288,483 45,336,010 73,624,493
Arizona 372,151,615 596,421,853 968,573,468
Arkansas 178,509,626 286,085,126 464,594,752
California 1,443,355,294 2,313,166,479 3,756,521,773
Colorado 178,553,958 286,156,175 464,710,133
Connecticut 106,000,358 169,879,499 275,879,857
Delaware 41,652,009 66,752,817 108,404,826
District of Columbia 24,860,559 39,842,313 64,702,872
Florida 950,379,359 1,523,107,778 2,473,487,137
Georgia 604,180,514 968,278,648 1,572,459,162
Hawaii 49,850,222 79,891,531 129,741,753
Idaho 86,458,222 138,560,660 225,018,882
Illinois 496,853,094 796,272,357 1,293,125,451
Indiana 337,076,458 540,209,308 877,285,766
Iowa 141,985,752 227,550,820 369,536,572
Kansas 133,466,378 213,897,405 347,363,783
Kentucky 293,307,790 470,064,268 763,372,058
Louisiana 296,835,564 475,717,989 772,553,553
Maine 45,660,198 73,176,466 118,836,664
Maryland 192,855,570 309,076,387 501,931,957
Massachusetts 196,164,566 314,379,488 510,544,054
Michigan 437,223,904 700,708,746 1,137,932,650
Minnesota 202,291,045 324,197,976 526,489,021
Mississippi 199,344,951 319,476,474 518,821,425
Missouri 277,132,195 444,140,749 721,272,944
Montana 42,477,481 68,075,745 110,553,226
Nebraska 89,286,484 143,093,320 232,379,804
Nevada 138,787,492 222,425,189 361,212,681
New Hampshire 29,736,767 47,657,076 77,393,843
New Jersey 266,779,051 427,548,476 694,327,527
New Mexico 122,970,798 197,076,859 320,047,657
New York 701,659,170 1,124,501,000 1,826,160,170
North Carolina 502,777,789 805,767,459 1,308,545,248
North Dakota 29,109,192 46,651,304 75,760,496
Ohio 499,067,750 799,821,634 1,298,889,384
Oklahoma 226,430,561 362,884,723 589,315,284
Oregon 155,312,363 248,908,466 404,220,829
Pennsylvania 454,791,980 728,863,896 1,183,655,876
Rhode Island 35,723,344 57,251,352 92,974,696
South Carolina 272,416,120 436,582,621 708,998,741
South Dakota 38,618,949 61,891,939 100,510,888
Tennessee 345,950,731 554,431,495 900,382,226
Texas 1,699,934,795 2,724,368,837 4,424,303,632
Utah 163,100,176 261,389,459 424,489,635
Vermont 18,302,749 29,332,561 47,635,310
Virginia 304,876,959 488,605,381 793,482,340
Washington 243,089,298 389,582,536 632,671,834
West Virginia 100,070,363 160,375,904 260,446,267
Wisconsin 222,761,422 357,004,444 579,765,866
Wyoming 18,285,260 29,304,530 47,589,790
Totals for States 14,318,391,756 22,947,103,865 37,265,495,621
TERRITORIES
  Child Care Development Fund Flexible Funding Child Care Stabilization Funding Total
American Samoa 19,083,903 30,522,786 49,606,689
Guam 27,498,602 43,981,253 71,479,855
Northern Mariana Islands 13,934,049 22,286,113 36,220,162
Puerto Rico 117,788,244 188,771,135 306,559,379
Virgin Islands 14,433,446 23,084,848 37,518,294
Totals for Territories 192,738,244 308,646,135 501,384,379
TRIBES

 

Child Care Development Fund Flexible Funding Child Care Stabilization Funding Total
Tribes 449,700,000 719,250,000 1,168,950,000
Totals for Tribes 449,700,000 719,250,000 1,168,950,000

 

Joseph R. Biden, Jr., FACT SHEET: Biden-Harris Administration Announces American Rescue Plan Funding to Rescue the Child Care Industry so the Economy Can Recover Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/349556

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