Pennsylvania
Working families in Pennsylvania need accessible, affordable, quality child care and early learning opportunities for their children.
Currently, federal and state early learning programs reach thousands of young children and their families in Pennsylvania. But too many working families in Pennsylvania are missing out. As a direct result of child care issues, the Pennsylvania economy loses millions of dollars each year in the form of lost earnings, productivity, and revenue.
There are 828K children ages 5 and under in Pennsylvania – 68% of these children have all available parents in the workforce.
The typical annual cost of child care for an infant in Pennsylvania is more than $14,000.
The Child Care and Development Block Grant only reaches 18% of eligible families in Pennsylvania. (This federal program helps low-income parents afford child care.)
On average, child care providers in Pennsylvania earn just $28,410 a year; this can make it a challenge to recruit and retain this workforce, leading to supply issues.
Pennsylvania’s economy loses $4.4B annually due to child care challenges.
Pennsylvania: In The Headlines
Child care shortage threatens Pennsylvania’s economy, new report argues
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette | October 13, 2024
A historic child care crisis is leaving thousands of Pennsylvania kids without access to critical early learning programs.
Opinion: Child care on the brink in PA: Erie’s Mary Euell explains the stakes
Go Erie | December 2, 2024
Surveys indicate seven in ten Pennsylvania families struggle to find affordable child care.
No easy answers for Pennsylvania’s child care crisis
WESA | oCTOBER 10, 2024
WESA’s Priyanka Tewari sat down with Sarah Boden, who covers caregiving and the social safety net for Spotlight PA, to discuss the state of the child care industry in Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania Resources & News
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