The Power of Local Politics: How Vermont is revolutionizing child care
Oct 24, 2024
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Allie Richards, CEO of Let's Grow Kids, leads the charge for affordable childcare in Vermont. They discuss the transformative impact of grassroots mobilization and highlight a groundbreaking childcare bill passed in June 2023, which offers financial support to both families and providers. With a compelling argument for public investment, Allie explains how quality childcare can actually boost the economy. Listeners are encouraged to engage locally, demonstrating how community action can foster real change.
Grassroots mobilization in Vermont, driven by over 40,000 individuals, effectively transformed the child care landscape through community advocacy and legislative action.
Investing in child care through subsidies not only supports families but also enhances the overall economy by fostering workforce participation and educator wages.
Deep dives
The Importance of Local Politics
Focusing on local politics can empower individuals to create tangible changes in their communities, especially during contentious national elections. Engaging in local issues often feels more accessible and impactful, providing a sense of hope amidst feelings of helplessness. This perspective underscores the significance of grassroots movements, where individuals can cultivate connections and work towards identifiable goals, like improved child care access. Successes at the local level can serve as models for broader democratic engagement and inspire more people to take action.
The Child Care Crisis in Vermont
In Vermont, the child care crisis is a substantial issue, with three out of five young children lacking accessible care options. Families often face exorbitant costs, spending up to 40% of their household income on child care, reflecting a significant gap in affordability and access. The average pay for early educators remains low, further exacerbating this crisis as quality care becomes more difficult to provide. Addressing these issues requires recognizing the systemic inadequacies in the current child care infrastructure, which have long been neglected.
Grassroots Mobilization and Policy Change
A concerted grassroots effort involving over 40,000 Vermonters has driven a campaign to transform child care across the state. By empowering early educators and parents, this movement has created a strong support network focused on advocating for essential policy changes. The culmination of these efforts led to the passage of Vermont's Act 76, which allocates substantial resources towards increasing access to quality child care. This campaign has highlighted the critical link between community mobilization and effective public policy, illustrating how a collective voice can achieve meaningful progress.
Economic Imperatives of Child Care Investment
Investing in child care is shown to not only benefit families and children but also bolster the wider economy by enhancing workforce participation. The passage of a new payroll tax in Vermont is designed to funnel significant funds into child care subsidies, making care more affordable for families while increasing the wages of early educators. This investment relationship illustrates that quality child care leads to long-term economic gains by facilitating a prepared and able workforce. Emphasizing that public investment is essential for a robust child care system ensures that stakeholders recognize the urgent need for systemic change.
In the run-up to November 5th, it's easy to feel hopeless about the state of our national discourse, and what any single one of us can do to make a difference. That's when we need to look local, where it feels like things can actually change, and where the people who are trying to make the changes feel approachable but, often, no less inspiring.
Today on ParentData, we're joined by Aly Richards, the CEO of Let's Grow Kids. They're on a mission to ensure affordable access to high quality child care for all Vermont families by 2025 - and they've actually done a lot of it. In June of 2023, the Vermont legislature made history by passing a first-of-its-kind, comprehensive child care bill into law, with overwhelming support from across the political spectrum. This bill supports child care through subsidies in both directions, to families and also to child care providers, and it provides a model for other states to hopefully follow.
In this conversation, we talk about grassroots mobilization, about clipboards at county fairs, about knocking on doors and how important that is. We talk about the economics of change. We give the cold, hard capitalist case for child care and for child care subsidies, and explain how child care actually pays for itself, if you take a long enough perspective. Get ready to be inspired.
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