NEW SERIES: The Childcare Challenge
For parents of young children, childcare isn't just unaffordable, it's increasingly unavailable. Also in this issue: Holiday Profile - POUR by Fifth Scents Candle.
The Childcare Challenge - Part 1
Editorโs Note: This first in a multipart series exploring the challenges parents with young children are facing finding childcare in our community. Today, youโll meet one family and get a sense of the challenges before them.
If you are a childcare provider, or a parent struggling with childcare costs, weโd like to hear from you. Please contact Martin Davis at mdavis@fxbgadvance.com or Adele Uphaus at adele@fxbgadvance.com.
by Martin Davis and Adele Uphaus
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF and MANAGING EDITOR
Valerie Irizarry and her husband seem to have everything a couple needs to be successful. Valerie holds a bachelorโs degree, and her spouse holds an M.B.A. Such degrees are supposed to hold the keys to financial success.
But these keys havenโt been enough to turn the lock for the Irizarrys. When Valerie was offered a full-time position earlier this year, she had to turn it down because she couldnโt afford childcare.
โAfterschool care for my three (of four) kids would cost more than my weekly salary,โ she told the Advance.
Cost wasnโt the only problem she faced.
Valerieโs family lives in southern Stafford County, and she said that with four children, there was โjust one private childcare facility in my specific area that could work with me.โ
The Irizarryโs tale isnโt just one of poor luck. A report released in October by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC) titled โVirginiaโs Self-Sufficiency Programs and the Availability and Affordability of Child Careโ found that childcare is beyond the reach of most families with younger children in the Old Dominion State.
Child care is unaffordable for most Virginia families with younger children and some Virginia families with school-age children. The costs of infant and toddler care exceed 7 percent of household income for more than 80 percent of Virginia families, and the cost of preschool exceeds 7 percent of household income for 74 percent of Virginia families.
It Starts with Cost
Childcare Aware of Virginia tracks costs across the Commonwealth, and the numbers of eye-popping.
Stafford County has the highest averages in our area. Parents looking to place an infant (up to 16 months) in a center will pay an average of $232 a week. Per year, that comes to a little more than $12,000. The minimum a family will pay according to CCAoVA is $180. That still works out to over $9,300 per year.
Though Spotsylvania and Fredericksburg are less expensive, โaffordableโ isnโt a word that many families would use to describe their costs. The average cost for an infant at a center in both locales is $218 a week, or about $11,300 annually.
Families can do better if theyโre fortunate enough to find family childcare. However, in Stafford the average cost is still $197 a week. Fredericksburg is $162, and Spotsylvania is $125.
Though costs decrease as children age, parents who must depend upon childcare to work are looking at these costs for a minimum of five years.
Irizarry has come to appreciate that the struggles she is facing are widespread. She points to online sites like MOM Squad of Fredericksburg, where people go to seek advice, help, and tips for navigating the childcare waters.
โThe desperation comes through in a lot of the posts,โ she tells the Advance.
A scan of local online parenting sites found several examples of the desperation that Irizarry is referencing.
One parent wrote that the cost of daycare is just the start:
โฆ daycare is more than what a lot of people make! โฆ the amount youโre paying for gas and food if your daycare/babysitter does not cover food cann easily run you $100 a week โฆ on top of what youโre paying for childcare.
Even for those fortunate enough to have daycare, the problems donโt end.
A poll done by Virginia Promise Partnership found that:
โฆ nearly half (48%) of parents said their job is currently being negatively impacted by a lack of access to child care, resulting in having to take time off of work (23%), reduce or change hours (18%), or quit their job (11%). These results align with an August 2022 employer survey conducted by the Virginia Early Childhood Foundation, the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, and the Virginia Chamber of Commerce. Seventy-six percent of employers surveyed stated that childcare availability impacted employee recruitment and retention, and 78 percent reported that employees frequently or occasionally miss work due to childcare issues.
Just the start
Though costs are keeping families who need access to childcare from accessing it, thatโs just one level difficulty we face trying to address this problem.
In our next report, we will focus on the cost to train and staff a childcare center in this area, and talk about the salaries these employees make.
Future reports will examine government efforts to address this issue, the role of nonprofits and faith communities in helping to fill the gap, and the impact this shortage is having on both families and their children. Weโll also explore some possible solutions.
Intern Charlie Li assisted with this report.
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-Martin Davis, Editor