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Murphy, Bye Call Current Child Care System ‘Insufficient’

by Michael Lee-Murphy | Apr 12, 2012 11:34am
(5) Comments | Commenting has expired
Posted to: Education

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Michael Lee-Murphy

U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy and state Sen. Beth Bye chat with children

(Updated 1:37 p.m.) A year’s tuition at the University of Connecticut costs roughly $8,000, which is about $3,000 less than the average annual cost of childcare, according to a study   commissioned by U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy.

Based on the results of the study, which mirrors similar studies conducted by the National Association of Child Care Resource & Referral Agencies, Murphy and state Sen. Beth Bye, D-West Hartford, visited a Hartford child care center Wednesday to call the current system “insufficient.”

The politicians spoke to the media—and a gang of 4-year-olds—at the playroom of the Capitol Child Development Center on Hartford’s Broad Street, a block from the Capitol building where many of the children’s parents work.

The cost of childcare is about 17 percent of the median household income in the state, nearly twice what the federal Department of Health and Human Services says is the “maximum affordable cost of childcare,” the survey found.

“Frankly whether you make $25,000 a year, or $100,000 a year, $11,000 on childcare is too much for too many families. And it’s causing a lot of families to really go through some gut wrenching decisions,” Murphy said.

Murphy, who has two children of his own, also announced plans to introduce a new piece of federal legislation that he hopes will double the $5,000 maximum that employers can provide to their employees in tax-free flexible spending accounts.

Murphy said that in 1986, when Congress capped these accounts at $5,000, that money probably would have covered the cost of childcare, but the cost has skyrocketed since then.

The legislation will most likely not be voted on this year, Murphy said, but rather next year when the Bush tax cuts expire and Congress tackles tax reform on a large scale.

The bill, Murphy said, would also require that the Flexible Spending Account cap be adjusted from year-to-year for inflation.

“Everything costs more in this state, so it just costs more for a facility like this to provide good child care. So we just have to recognize that in a higher cost state, we’re going to have higher child care costs, and the Federal Government has to do something to help families,” Murphy said.

While Congress seems locked in partisan gridlock, the state legislature is trying to move forward with improving access to early childhood education by increasing funding and the number of preschool slots for 3 and 4 year olds.

Both of the center’s co-directors said that they are pleased with the increased funding for early childhood education in Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s education reform package.

“I’ve been almost 38 years in the field and we were moving so forward and it was wonderful. [But] in the last 10 years we’ve seen so many changes, we’re going in the wrong direction,” Carol Sinicrope, one of the center’s co-directors, said.

On the state level, Bye said she would like to see changes to the “Care4Kids” program that provides childcare subsidies to low and moderate income families in Connecticut. Currently, Bye said, women who go on maternity leave would lose their subsidy, and on occasion would not be able to return to work because of the high cost of child care.

There is a bill moving through the legislature allows mothers on maternity leave to be eligible for up to 12 weeks, provided they intend to return to work.

The bill has passed through the Appropriations Committee and is headed to the Senate.

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(5) Comments

posted by: Reasonable | April 12, 2012  3:16pm

Chris Murphy—why are you focusing on an issue you can’t address this year—only a study designed for obvious exploition of Election Day votes?

Many members of Congress are expected to be replaced on Election Day, by failing to try to tackle jobs, foreclosures, high fuel prices, the student loans impasse, and address our massive budget deficit, and the like.

Please put you nose to the grind-stone, Chris Murphy, and tackle our many problems—that you can address THIS YEAR. Next year—may be too late, to address our many national problems that need immediate attention,

posted by: joemanc | April 12, 2012  4:03pm

If folks cannot afford child care, then don’t have kids. I don’t have any, nor do I want any, and that is my choice. Why does Murphy believe in punishing my choice by taking money from me, through my federal tax dollars? Delauro came out last year wanting to provide government help for diapers…it makes me wonder, are we trying to help people out or buy their votes?

posted by: ALD | April 13, 2012  8:08am

“So we just have to recognize that in a higher cost state, we’re going to have higher child care costs, and the Federal Government has to do something to help families,” Murphy said”

Unfortunatly for us all Mr Murphy wasn’t even born yet when another Democrat said to us all: “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for our country.

posted by: Reasonable | April 13, 2012  12:57pm

ALD:  Your are politically astute.  Chris Murphy did not bring anything worthwhile to the table, so you tie him in to Pres. Kennedy—even though Murphy could never begin to tie Kennedy’s shoes!

The only President ALD can honestly resemble Murphy to—is Barack Obama, as neither served and fought for our country—and are only known for their political rhetoric.

posted by: GoatBoyPHD | April 14, 2012  3:58am

GoatBoyPHD

Then there’s school vouchers Murph. Indexed at 40% of the city per capita funding and available to all parents to spend where they like.

Administer a block grant to the states to be vouchered to the parents to select any school they want: public, private, parochial or qualified homeschooling.

Many of the Milwaukee preschools offer tuition capped at the voucher level of $6442 per student and then offer supplementary services for late afternoone and/or early AM. Usual stuff.