Decorative image of a young child striking a piƱata

How Accessible Child Care Would Transform Latino Quality of Life

How Accessible Child Care Would Transform Latino Quality of LifeDecorative image of a young child striking a piƱata

How Accessible Child Care Would Transform Latino Quality of Life


Yolanda Garnica adopted her nephew, Andrew, when he was less than two years old.

She wanted to give him a loving home, and believed that with two stable incomes she and her husband would be able to afford child care that would provide for his special needs.

ā€œAndrew was a little behind, and so it was really important that I would find somebody that wasnā€™t just going to sit him down and say, ā€˜Here, play with these toys.ā€™ I wanted book time, nap time, a routine, you know?ā€

But Yolanda struggled to find affordable child care that would accommodate his individual needs. And at every turn she was locked out of child care assistance because she didnā€™t qualify.

ā€œMy husband owns his own business and I work for the county, so because child care [enrollment] is income based, we were above, and couldnā€™t get in.ā€

Additionally, Andrew needed speech therapy and mental health services, but because Yolanda had private insurance, she couldnā€™t get access to additional support for her son.

ā€œAndrew struggles with a lot of different things because of his past. It's not his fault, but he was put in [some traumatic] situations as a child. We did everything we could, but he needed more. However, Andrew didn't qualify for therapy because he isnā€™t a MediCal recipient.ā€

Yolanda lives in Hayward, California, but the need for individual, quality and affordable child care is a nationwide problem. In the forthcoming 2022 National Latino Family Survey, a study of 1,300 parents and caregivers, found that one in five Latino families report their child has been diagnosed with a learning or developmental disability.

1 in 5 Families with children prenatal to 5 years old have a child with a learning disability1 in 5 Families with children prenatal to 5 years old have a child with a learning disability
National Latino Family Survey 2022
Interventions for developmental delays and learning disabilities are critical in the early years of a childā€™s life. In fact, early learning interventions have life-long impacts.

Impacts of Quality Early Education & Care

Studies show that participation in high-quality child care and early childhood education programs have longitudinal, multi-generational effects.

Children who attend high-quality early childhood education programs perform better academically (Brookings Institute, 2013), stay in school longer (National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021), have lower rates of depression (American Economic Journal, 2014), exhibit better physical health, and earn higher salaries (Journal of Human Resources, 2017).

Despite the well documented positive effects of early education programs, a report in 2021 by the U.S. Treasury found ā€œthe United States currently lags behind most developed countries in how we educate young children.ā€

Early childhood researchers have been ringing alarm bells for more than two decades. In the report From Neurons to Neighborhoods: The Science of Early Childhood Development, published in 2000, researchers urged, ā€œThe incapacity of many early childhood programs to address [sadness, grief, and trauma] and the severe shortage of early childhood professionals with mental health expertise are urgent problems.ā€

ā€œEarly environments matter and nurturing relationships are essential,ā€ they wrote. ā€œVirtually every aspect of early human development, from the brainā€™s evolving circuitry to the childā€™s capacity for empathy, is affected by the environments and experiences that are encountered.ā€

Yolanda is among the majority of Latino parents who are concerned about the quality of child care and early learning. The National Latino Family Survey found that the top three issues Latino parents want the government to address are: child safety, access to quality child care, and quality early learning opportunities.

Decorative image of a child washing a baby doll in a classroomMost important factors when considering childcare: Cost Affordability, Quality Good Reputation and skilled caregivers, Hours of operation accommodating parents schedulesMost important factors when considering childcare: Cost Affordability, Quality Good Reputation and skilled caregivers, Hours of operation accommodating parents schedules
National Latino Family Survey 2022

Child Care in America

The child care system in America is experiencing crisis-level vacancies, turn-over, and skyrocketing cost. The system is overburdened by demand, yet unable to employ and retain qualified child care providers because of historically low wages.

Under these circumstances, finding qualified child care staff who can provide quality early learning, speech therapy, mental health services, orā€”at the very leastā€”individual attention, is nearly impossible.

ā€œI was looking for stability, communication, and a higher level of care. Quality child care is when they can look at your child as an individual and not as a group. It makes a big difference when a child is acknowledged,ā€ said Yolanda.

ā€œGetting a certificate doesn't make you a good care provider, right? That's just a piece of paper saying you attended the classes, you did what you had to do. It's compassion. It's building character,ā€ she said.

Top 3 early education issues parents want the government to address: Child safety, Access to quality child care, Access to quality pre-KTop 3 early education issues parents want the government to address: Child safety, Access to quality child care, Access to quality pre-K
National Latino Family Survey 2022

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services defines affordable child care as out-of-pocket costs of seven percent or less of total household income. However, according to the 2021 study, the average American spends 13 percent of their income on child care. That cost is especially untenable for young parents.

The report found ā€œless than 20 percent of children eligible for one of the largest federal assistance programs for low-income families (the Child Care and Development Fund) actually receives funding.ā€ And, often, the income ceiling turns away families like Yolandaā€™s with lower-middle class salaries, who canā€™t afford or find child care without assistance.

This gap in care for young children, especially those with developmental difficulties, is critical. Harvard researchers have found that 90 percent of a childā€™s brain development happens before age five.

ā€œIf we could have helped Andrew when he was younger, it could have made a big difference,ā€ Yolanda said. ā€œBut we couldnā€™t because he didnā€™t qualify. It was a terrible thing.ā€

The Economy of Care

The Build Back Better Act, a monumental social policy plan proposed by the Biden administration, included subsidies for child care and pre-K programs for all Americansā€”but failed to pass the Senate. The Inflation Reduction Act followed, but the provisions for universal pre-K, lower child care costs, and paid sick leave were all struck from the bill during negotiations. According to a CNN analysis, ā€œthose cuts became the ninth time in just two and a half years where legislation aimed at helping women and families has been removed.ā€
"quality child care is when they can look at your child as an individual and not as a group. It makes a big difference when a child is acknowledged." - Yolanda Garnica

Although lawmakers continue to cut this much-needed funding, researchers consistently find affordable, high-quality child care has outsized economic returns. A study from the National Bureau of Economic Research calculated that a dollar invested in early childhood programs pays off more than nine times in terms of benefits to society. Benefits include higher academic achievement, higher earning potential, lower incarceration and crime rates, and improved health outcomes.

ā€œI wish I could say something to lawmakers because itā€™s so personal,ā€ said Yolanda. ā€œEvery child deserves a chance, Andrew should have been entitled to resources so he could get therapy to help him become a better student, a better person.ā€

Research suggests the multi-generational effects of affordable care would be an incredible economic engine for the country. If parents had more child care support, they could dedicate more time and money to higher education, training, mental health, and community involvement. And their children would grow up to enjoy better education outcomes, higher lifetime salaries, and overall a better quality of life.

Latino communities are a major contributor to the economy and electoral power. According to the 2022 UnidosUS analysis, Latinos are one of the fastest-growing populations in the country, increasing by 23 percent since 2010. This increase is due overwhelmingly to births, not immigration. Latinos are 30 percent more likely to own their own business than other Americans and now make up 13.1 percent of eligible voters.

U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Janet Yellen, writes: ā€œItā€™s past time that we treat child care as what it isā€”an element whose contribution to economic growth is as essential as infrastructure or energy.ā€

Survey Methodology: On behalf of Abriendo Puertas/Opening Doors and UnidosUS, BSP Research collected opinions from 1,300 Latino parents and primary caregivers of children 5 years of age or younger including expecting families using a blended data collection approach that included online surveys, and live telephone interviews conducted via landlines and cell phones. The survey was available in English or Spanish and carries an overall +/- 2.7% margin of error, with larger margins for sub-samples. Upon completion, the data were weighted to match the U.S. Census ACS for parents and grandparents of Latino origin. The survey was conducted from September 6-October 4, 2022 and includes oversamples for both New Mexico and Los Angeles County.