\r\n \t
  • Early care and education providers, policy experts, advocators, and employers shed light on what employer-sponsored childcare could look like.<\/li>\r\n \t
  • How can employer-based childcare help families that struggle to afford early childhood care?<\/li>\r\n \t
  • Read about the importance of high-quality education.\u00a0<\/a><\/li>\r\n<\/ul>","intro":null,"content":"The last several years have served as one prolonged watershed moment for the early care and education sector.The pandemic and its many aftershocks \u2014 including a hit to\u00a0labor force participation among women\u00a0and a severe\u00a0early childhood staffing shortage\u00a0\u2014 helped many Americans unacquainted with these issues begin to understand the integral role that early care and education play in economic and social stability.Many employers became more aware of the challenges of raising children in the United States, where child care and early childhood education are not guaranteed and, in many places and for many families, are\u00a0prohibitively expensive and inaccessible.The national\u00a0annual average price\u00a0of child care in 2022 was $10,853. In some parts of the country, it can cost more than double that. A federal solution to this widespread and well-documented scourge has not emerged, though Congress came close to passing transformative legislation around child care in 2021. While other efforts have been proposed \u2014 and some have even passed \u2014 at the state and local levels, many working families are still left in the lurch.As a result, some employers have stepped in, offering a range of childcare benefits in hopes of attracting and retaining qualified workers in a tight labor market \u2014 the idea being that, if employees are happy with their child care arrangements, they will show up to work more focused and satisfied.In a recent\u00a0Care.com survey\u00a0administered to leaders from 500 companies, 46 percent said they are prioritizing child care benefits in 2023. That probably has something to do with the fact that nearly 80 percent said they\u2019ve found that child care benefits boost their company\u2019s productivity, recruitment and retention.But as far as solutions to child care go, is employer involvement a good one? Not everyone thinks so.The growing popularity of this approach \u2014 and the controversy surrounding it \u2014 was the subject of a recent in-depth\u00a0story\u00a0that EdSurge co-published with USA Today, following interviews with a dozen early care and education providers, policy experts, advocators and employers, as well as a visit to an on-site employer-sponsored child care program.Here are the key takeaways from that reporting:Employer participation in child care is gaining steam.Childcare benefits come in many shapes and sizes.Families want maximum flexibility.","html_content":"

    The last several years have served as one prolonged watershed moment for the early care and education sector.<\/p>

    The pandemic and its many aftershocks \u2014 including a hit to\u00a0labor force participation among women<\/a>\u00a0and a severe\u00a0early childhood staffing shortage<\/a>\u00a0\u2014 helped many Americans unacquainted with these issues begin to understand the integral role that early care and education play in economic and social stability.<\/p>

    Many employers became more aware of the challenges of raising children in the United States, where child care and early childhood education are not guaranteed and, in many places and for many families, are\u00a0prohibitively expensive and inaccessible<\/a>.<\/p>

    The national\u00a0annual average price<\/a>\u00a0of child care in 2022 was $10,853. In some parts of the country, it can cost more than double that. A federal solution to this widespread and well-documented scourge has not emerged, though Congress came close to passing transformative legislation around child care in 2021. While other efforts have been proposed \u2014 and some have even passed \u2014 at the state and local levels, many working families are still left in the lurch.<\/p>

    As a result, some employers have stepped in, offering a range of childcare benefits in hopes of attracting and retaining qualified workers in a tight labor market \u2014 the idea being that, if employees are happy with their child care arrangements, they will show up to work more focused and satisfied.<\/p>

    In a recent\u00a0Care.com survey<\/a>\u00a0administered to leaders from 500 companies, 46 percent said they are prioritizing child care benefits in 2023. That probably has something to do with the fact that nearly 80 percent said they\u2019ve found that child care benefits boost their company\u2019s productivity, recruitment and retention.<\/p>

    <\/figure>

    But as far as solutions to child care go, is employer involvement a good one? Not everyone thinks so.<\/p>

    The growing popularity of this approach \u2014 and the controversy surrounding it \u2014 was the subject of a recent in-depth\u00a0story<\/a>\u00a0that EdSurge co-published with USA Today, following interviews with a dozen early care and education providers, policy experts, advocators and employers, as well as a visit to an on-site employer-sponsored child care program.<\/p>

    Here are the key takeaways from that reporting:<\/p>

    1. Employer participation in child care is gaining steam.<\/strong><\/li>
    2. Childcare benefits come in many shapes and sizes.<\/strong><\/li>
    3. Families want maximum flexibility.<\/strong><\/li><\/ol>

      Read the full article about employer-sponsored childcare by Emily Tate Sullivan at EdSurge.