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Child Care Gaps in Rural America Threaten to Undercut Small Communities

Candy Murnion remembers vividly the event that pushed her to open her first day care business in Jordan, a town of fewer than 400 residents in a sea of grassland in eastern Montana.

Garfield County’s public health nurse, one of few public health officials serving the town and nearly 5,000 square miles that surround it, had quit because she had given birth to her second child and couldn’t find day care.

Today, her day care programs, the only ones in Jordan, can serve up to 30 children, ranging from 6 weeks old to school age. But after that pandemic-era funding support ended in September, Murnion began to wonder how long she could sustain her expanded capacity, or whether she’d need to raise prices or lower enrollment.

And she isn’t alone.

Data collected prior to the pandemic shows that more than half of Americans lived in neighborhoods classified as child care deserts, areas that have no child care providers or where there are more than three children in the community for every available licensed care slot. Other research shows parents and child care providers in rural areas face unique barriers. Access to quality child care programs and early education is linked to better educational and behavioral outcomes for kids and can also help link families and children to immunizations, health screenings, and greater food security by providing meals and snacks.

WindyRebel ,

I work in marketing for a couple of large child care companies and the struggle for parents is real. I am also a parent with an elementary age child.

This article is spot on and these smaller areas are where I see a lot of decline for conversion because there just isn’t a pool of reliable child care workers there or centers to service them. It’s a combo of lack of professionals who left the industry for being under paid/exposed (sickness is unavoidable for littles) during the pandemic and the cost of child care for parents who either don’t want to pay what it should cost or they can’t which is awful! Many women bear the brunt of this, unfairly because of gender wage gaps and social “norms”.

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