Michigan Senate Committee Passes Child Care Reform Bills with Mostly Bipartisan Support
The package seeks to lower child care costs and expand options.
Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 蜜桃影视 Newsletter
Two bill packages 鈥 one seeking to lower child care costs and expand options, especially in areas without significant child care options, and the other to clarify child neglect and abuse statutes 鈥 passed through the Senate Housing and Human Services committee on Tuesday morning.
Only two of the bills in the first package, which would essentially codify the state鈥檚 and adjust reimbursements under that program, which child care benefits to families under a certain income threshold by splitting the cost of an employee鈥檚 child care between the employer, the employee and the State of Michigan, faced opposition from the Republican members of the committee, still passing on party lines.
In a on the bills earlier in March, Sen. Rosemary Bayer (D-West Bloomfield), who sponsored one of the bills in the package, said that the child care system is 鈥渋n crisis,鈥 which is having a $2.9 billion annual economic impact on the state.
鈥淭he system is shrinking. Families can鈥檛 afford or find accessible child care providers,鈥 Bayer said. 鈥淧roviders are losing employees, shrinking or even closing down, and families are struggling to pay for services if they can find one, with costs often over $1,100 a month.鈥
鈥淭he astronomical cost of child care, coupled with the hoops and hurdles providers must jump through to stay open, continues to fuel a crisis that impacts our families, workforce, and broader state economy,鈥 said Sen. Sarah Anthony (D-Lansing), sponsor of , one of the bills which passed unanimously, in a press release following the vote. 鈥淏y cutting some of the costs and red tape facing providers, we can start to address the child care deserts that exist throughout the state, especially in our rural communities.鈥
Prior to the vote, Sen. Sylvia Santana (D-Warrendale) emphasized that, though she supports the bills, she also hoped to see further conversations about the impacts of these bills on businesses offering child care programs 鈥 which Sen. Jonathan Lindsey (R-Coldwater) added could call into question the need for MiLEAP, the Michigan Department of Lifelong Education, Advancement, and Potential, more broadly.
鈥淚f we鈥檙e serious and we鈥檙e dedicated to making sure that access to child care is available, definitely there needs to be more oversight in this area, and also maybe just a really a deep dive into how these rules in this book reflect when it comes to the actual common sense of child care and those provisions that we鈥檝e put in place,鈥 Santana said. 鈥淪o I鈥檓 dedicated to this package of bills. I don鈥檛 mind getting it out of committee, but I do want to have a broader conversation with stakeholders, as well as those business owners who are definitely feeling the pinch of some of the rules within this book that may not make common sense at this point for them to be able to really continue as business owners.鈥
The other two bills in that package, which would establish a review and appeal process for certain violations of child care organization rules and set in place standards for investigations, passed unanimously.
Both bills in the second package on altering the child abuse and neglect statutes also passed unanimously. They would specify the definitions of child neglect and abuse, specifically excluding 鈥渋ndependent activities鈥 like walking or bicycling to school or playing outdoors from qualifying under child neglect and abuse statutes.
鈥淭he idea is to make sure that our childhood welfare laws are aligned with reasonable childhood independence and that parents child care providers, first responders, schools, day cares, everyone has the right information about what is neglect and abuse and what is not, so that we can reduce the number of false reports and unneeded investigations,鈥 said committee chair Sen. Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor), who sponsored one of the bills, in an on the legislation.
All of the bills will now be reported to the full Senate for a vote.
is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jon King for questions: [email protected].
Did you use this article in your work?
We鈥檇 love to hear how 蜜桃影视鈥檚 reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers.