Since 2019, Child Care Aware® of America (CCAoA) has partnered with Nemours Children’s Health to create geographic information system (GIS) technology story maps to visualize and better understand child care program participation in the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). Story maps combine both maps and text to help users interpret what they see. They can help us visualize current challenges and opportunities in a state’s early care and education systems.
This blog recaps our work to develop the story maps and explores how states, including Pennsylvania and Vermont, are using these tools to make data-informed, strategic decisions to promote CACFP and increase provider participation.
CACFP is a crucial federal program that brings nutritious food to, and builds positive eating habits for, children in center-based, home-based, and after-school care programs. It also helps child care providers cover some of the food costs for their programs through reimbursements for serving meals and snacks that meet federal nutrition standards. Centers and family child care programs may be approved to claim up to two reimbursable meals and one snack, or two snacks and one meal, for each eligible child per day.
Despite these numerous benefits, CACFP is underutilized across states for a myriad of well-documented reasons, including low awareness, inadequate reimbursement rates, and burdensome reporting and administrative requirements. Family child care programs, for example, are reimbursed at two different tiers of rates depending on their household income or the income of the families served. As a result, family child care providers who are eligible for the lower reimbursement rate may be hesitant to participate. A recent study shows that of all the licensed child care centers serving young children in 47 states and Washington, DC, just 36.5% participated in CACFP. Data shows that more than 46% of family child care providers participating in CACFP have exited the program since 1996. This has been exacerbated by the pandemic, which caused some CACFP-participating programs to either close their doors or limit enrollment, leading to a decrease in CACFP participation.
Over the last five years, CCAoA has mapped CACFP participation across 20 states and Washington, D.C., who were granted technical assistance awards through Nemours Children’s Health. These CACFP story maps, which were developed with support from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, offer states a data-driven tool to identify gaps in CACFP participation and set goals to increase program uptake. You can find all our CACFP story maps here.
The story maps layer multiple data together. Specifically, the datasets featured on these maps include child care programs' status in CACFP based on data received from the state grantees; food deserts from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); and the rate of families with children under 5 living below 185% of the Federal Poverty Level, from the US Census American Community Survey (ACS). CCAoA then used online GIS to display CACFP participation by provider, allowing us to identify successes and gaps in CACFP coverage alongside the locations of areas with low food access and high rates of families experiencing poverty.
The analysis included in these story maps is relatively uncommon and complex because of the lack of existing integrated or interoperable data systems— child care licensing data and CACFP participation data are typically housed within different state agencies and the datasets are often not compatible with each other. To address this issue, CCAoA engaged staff across multiple state agencies and departments, including from state health, early childhood, agriculture, and education offices, to bring these datasets together and confirm the analysis used in the story maps.
States overwhelmingly indicated in a survey that they would like to update their story map data in the future if given the opportunity, but there were barriers to making these updates on their own, including staff capacity, cost and a lack of reliable data. Since the project began, six states (Florida, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Pennsylvania, and Vermont) have returned to create a second version of the CACFP story maps.
Throughout the data gathering and story map development process, CCAoA engages state grantees in conversations around how they can use the story maps to take a data-driven approach to promote CACFP and increase program participation. These state-specific goals are included in the “Strategies for Change” section of the story maps. The tactics vary, but states have most often shared that they plan to use the story maps to target CACFP expansion efforts and boost general awareness, strengthen systems of support for providers and sponsoring agencies, and inform state and federal policymakers about the need for increased investments and policy change.
Given that the data in the maps is stagnant and represents CACFP participation at a point in time, there are some limitations to using the story maps for long-term strategic planning. State grantees shared that a point-in-time analysis, however, is still incredibly useful as a baseline because it gives stakeholders a better understanding of disparities and gaps in CACFP participation among providers. In our evaluation of this technical assistance experience, we found that state grantees were able to use their story maps as introductions to their state’s CACFP landscape with other state agencies, policymakers, and early childhood education stakeholders. Conversations around the story maps have led to coalition-building and propelled stakeholder interest in addressing the barriers providers experience with current CACFP requirements.
The story maps yield robust data to help visualize gaps in CACFP participation and provide a basis for city and state leaders to make data-informed and strategic decisions that will increase children’s access to nutritious meals and help child care providers cover food costs for children.
In 2022, CCAoA surveyed state grantees to gather feedback about the story map development process and how states have used these tools. Given that the datasets for child care licensing and CACFP participation usually live in different state agencies, state grantees overwhelmingly noted that bringing multiple state agencies and/or departments together helped build stronger relationships and raise general awareness about CACFP participation across offices. One state grantee shared that this mapping opportunity helped break down intra-agency “silos” and increase mutual understanding of agencies’ roles, program limitations and data gaps. Another state grantee shared that the development of the tool is a testament to how different state agencies can successfully work together to use data to implement interventions, provide training, and collectively raise awareness of CACFP within their states. Externally, state grantees reported that the mapping opportunity helped develop new and strengthen existing partnerships with their CACFP sponsor organizations, child care resource and referral agencies, local food producers, local early childhood education stakeholders, food banks, United Ways, and other non-profit organizations.
State grantees responded that they have used the story maps to boost awareness of CACFP and tailor outreach to non-participating child care providers. The maps have been used to guide examinations of barriers to participation and focus efforts to determine where new sponsoring agencies are needed. The story maps have also been used by local communities and nutrition advocates to better understand, in a more tangible way, where outreach should be prioritized based on the overlays of participation and food desert data.
From the survey, states shared how they have used the story maps in various ways. In their own words, some examples include:
In June 2023, the Pennsylvania and Vermont state grantees presented how they are using their story maps at a virtual convening hosted by Nemours. Both states shared that they’re using the story maps to strengthen partnerships with other state organizations and agencies and to achieve lasting state systems change. Pennsylvania and Vermont are among the six states that returned to have a second, updated story map created.
CCAoA first developed a CACFP story map for Pennsylvania in 2019 and created a second story map for the state in 2023. The state grantee, the Department of Public Health, shared that they’ve used the map to:
CCAoA first developed a CACFP story map for the Vermont state grantee in 2022 and is currently in the process of creating a second, updated story map for the state. The Vermont Department of Health, Child Development Division, and Agency of Education, along with other early childhood education and nutrition stakeholders, were involved in the development of the original story map. They have shared that they’ve used the map to: