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Report Shows Gaps in Child Care for Kids of Healthcare Workers

By CCAoA on April 09, 2020

WDET (NPR/Detroit)

While health care workers are on the front lines of the fight against COVID-19, who’s taking care of their children?

A Yale University study shows almost 3.5 million children of people who work in the American health care industry need some kind of child care while their parents are at work. The report also shows there are about 1.3 million employed child care providers, not including teachers and other education specialists.

Congress recently approved $3.5 billion dollars to shore up the child care system during the coronavirus pandemic.

It’s going to take a lot more than that, according to the nonprofit advocacy group Child Care Aware of America.

Listen to the interview with Lynette Fraga, Executive Director of CCAoA

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What to Do if Your Day Care Is Still Open

By CCAoA on April 03, 2020

New York Times

Despite widespread closures of just about everything because of the Covid-19 pandemic, many day care facilities remain open around the United States — either for all children or just for children of essential workers.

Regulations for child care facilities vary by state, said Dr. Lynette Fraga, Ph.D., executive director of Child Care Aware of America, a nonprofit advocacy group. And like everything else related to Covid-19, rules are evolving rapidly. “It’s really changing, sometimes hourly,” Dr. Fraga said.

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The child care crisis for essential employees

By CCAoA on April 02, 2020

WUSA-9 (CBS/Washington, DC)

Dr. Lynette Fraga with Child Care Aware of America shares some statistics and support for child care for essential employees.

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Topics: Media Mention

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States scramble to arrange child care for essential workers

By CCAoA on March 29, 2020

Associated Press

With schools and many day care centers closed, states, local governments and philanthropists are scrambling to free up parents who are medical workers, emergency responders and others needed on the front lines of the fight against the coronavirus outbreak.

“We have historically not had the infrastructure and supply of child care available to families at an affordable cost prior to the pandemic,” said Lynette Fraga, executive director of advocacy group Child Care Aware of America. For essential workers, she said: “The inability to find that care is exacerbated as the result of the times we find ourselves in.”

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Topics: Media Mention

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