WASHINGTON–U.S Senator Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), a member of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, on Wednesday spoke on the U.S. Senate floor about the urgent need for Congress to take action to address the worsening child care crisis.
“When you are living on a more modest salary, not a poverty wage, but just a modest, lower- to middle-income salary, your entire world could fall apart if you lose access to a quality child care environment. People have to quit their jobs. They have to move back in with their parents. They have to move their entire family to a different city or a different state. Your entire life gets upended when you can't find care for your child. Because you will upend your entire life for your child. Nothing matters more than making sure that your child is safe,” said Murphy. “And so, what we are forcing our families to do, simply because we don't choose to do the right thing and provide funding to make sure that there are affordable, quality child care centers available, is sending our families into unnecessary crisis all over this country.”
Murphy laid out just how dire affording child care can be for a family in Connecticut making $42,000: “Let's say a family makes $42,000, doesn't qualify for our subsidy, is spending $22,000 a year on rent, is spending $15,000 a year on childcare, that's $37,000 a year. They make $42,000. $5,000 left. [$100] a week for everything else. For food, for your cell phone, for your clothes for your kid. If you're making above the rate of subsidy in Connecticut, just the cost of child care and rent, will leave you with just [$100] a week to survive. In the richest, most affluent country in the world, how can we justify leaving families who are doing the right thing, who are working in that position?”
Murphy concluded: “That's why I'm so glad to be here on the floor with my colleagues pleading with our Republican friends to do the right thing and support the President's proposed plan to support child care, affordable, quality child care in this country for the families I represent Connecticut.”
A full transcript of his remarks can be found below:
“Thank you, Madam President. I'm so glad to join my colleagues on the floor today to really emphasize how a family's life falls apart when they don't have access to good child care. I'm one of a handful of parents of young kids. I have no complaints. Obviously my wife and I make enough money so that we've been able to provide quality child care for our kids as we both been working throughout their life.
“But when you are living on a more modest salary, not a poverty wage, but just a modest, lower to middle income salary, your entire world could fall apart when you lose access to a quality child care environment. People have to quit their jobs. They have to move back in with their parents. They have to move their entire family to a different city or a different state. Your entire life gets upended when you can't find care for your child. Because you will have in your entire life for your child. Nothing matters more than making sure that your child is safe.
“And so, what we are forcing our families to do, simply because we don't choose to do the right thing and provide funding to make sure that there are affordable child care qualities available, it is sending our families into unnecessary crisis all over this country.
“In my state, I've had 124,000 parents report that their work has been disrupted by child care issues. That they've had to leave work. That they have had to leave employments because of interruption in child care. Our child care centers in Connecticut. We're a high cost child care state. We're a high cost state in general. 89 percent of them report that they've had difficulty hiring staff. 60 percent of them say that right now they are understaffed. And 70 percent of them say that they have waitlists for new families, which just shows you that all over Connecticut, we have a total mismatch between the number of slots and the number of families that need those slots.
“And of course, that delivers an enormous harm to families but also to our workforce. I met a young woman a few weeks ago who lives in Hartford, and she's got a very young child. They are on the waitlist for a subsidized child care slot. She wants to actually be a child care worker. She wants to help solve the workforce shortage, but she can't get into the workforce. Why? Because she has to stay home to take care of her young child.
“And so this cycle that ends up impacting not just families, but our economy writ-large is one that we have to break.
“I just want to leave you with this one last piece of math to just explain how serious the situation is in my state. So in Connecticut, we have a program called Care for Kids. And this is a program that does for lower income families try to give them some subsidy so that they can afford child care. But that program cuts off for a one child family at $41,500 a year in income. Now that's a lower middle income salary in Connecticut. That's a salary that's not unfamiliar in my state.
“Let me just do the very quick math for you. For a family of three, a two bedroom, a one bedroom house can be about $1,800 a month. Child care in Connecticut on average is going to be about $15,000 a year. Total of just the costs for a family that makes just above the threshold to qualify for our subsidy programs. Let's say a family makes $42,000, doesn't qualify for our subsidy, is spending $22,000 a year on rent, is spending $15,000 a year on childcare, that's $37,000 a year. They make $42,000. $5,000 left. [$100] a week for everything else.
“For food, for your cell phone, for your clothes for your kid. If you're making above the rate of subsidy in Connecticut, just the cost of child care and rent, will leave you with just [$100] a week to survive. In the richest, most affluent country in the world, how can we justify leaving families who are doing the right thing, who are working in that position.
“That's why I'm so glad to be here on the floor with my colleagues pleading with our Republican friends to do the right thing and support the President's proposed plan to support child care, affordable, quality child care in this country for the families I represent Connecticut.”
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