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This profile highlights how federal MIECHV funding is being used to provide evidence-based home visiting services to children and families, and to identify innovative approaches, successes, and challenges.
President Obama’s FY 2016 budget proposal featured ambitious and thoughtful proposals to create opportunity for children and youth, help struggling low-income families move into the middle class and succeed once there, and invest in America’s labor force.
President Obama’s FY 2016 budget proposal offers a bold vision for child care and early education in America, making a landmark, ongoing investment in a continuum of child care and early education services for children from birth through school entry.
President Obama's landmark announcement was a plan to provide high-quality child care to all low-income children under age 4.
Hannah Matthews is quoted in an article on the Child Care Development Block Grant.
The 25-year update to the National Child Care Staffing Study, Worthy Work STILL Unlivable Wages, shows that little has changed since 1989; child care staff continues to make poor wages and turnover remains high.
After moving through the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives with strong, bipartisan support, the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) Act of 2014 became law today, signed by the President.
A CLASP report is cited in this article on the Senate's passage of the Child Care and Development Block Grant Act.
A CLASP Report is cited in this article on child care in Missouri, a state which lost more children than any other state from a federal program that helps working parents pay for child care.
The U.S. Senate passed a House amendment to the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) Act of 2014, sending this important bill to the desk of President Obama for his signature.