The current child care system in the United States is broken, and everyone involved—the children, their parents and especially the workers supporting them—are suffering as a result, according to a new report from the Center for the Study of Child Care Employment (CSCCE) at the University of California, Berkeley, which was released Tuesday.
Despite a pandemic that has labeled child care workers “essential” and raised public awareness of the importance of early care and education, the industry remains “woefully” underfunded and overlooked, says Caitlin McLean, senior research specialist and co-author of the Early Childhood Workforce Index 2020. Stopgap solutions such as expanding the child care tax credit may help in the short-term, she notes, but anything short of a complete overhaul of the system would be like “adding a new floor to a condemned home.”
The report, which compiles state-level data on poverty rates, wage gaps, qualifications, workforce data and more, finds that early childhood educators across the country earn, on average, $11.65 an hour. (The lowest median wage, in Mississippi, is $8.94 per hour, and the highest, in Washington, D.C., is $15.36.)
“Even in the best of times, pre-pandemic, early educators are among the lowest paid workers in the country,” says McLean, adding that they are among the bottom 2 percent of professions by salary.
Single child care workers with no children make a living wage in just 10 states, according to the report. Single child care workers who have at least one child, which is the reality for many who work in early care and education, do not meet the threshold for a living wage in any state.