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Quotes Pronita Gupta and Kate Gallagher Robbins about the provisions of the stimulus bill for working women.
Cites CLASP's analysis of how COVID relief funds for child care will be distributed among the states.
The National Women’s Law Center and the Center for Law and Social Policy found that it would take nearly $10 billion per month to keep the child care system afloat during the pandemic.
Christine Johnson-Staub said "federal dollars should be tracked to ensure they are allocated equitably, and policies should support fair compensation and job quality for child care providers of color."
The COVID-19 pandemic and recession have taken this simmering crisis and turned it into an explosive boil, demanding immediate response from the Biden-Harris Administration.
Recommendations for urgent actions the Biden-Harris Administration should take to address the child care and early learning crisis to ensure the health and safety of early educators and families during COVID
CLASP helped lead the development of these child care and early learning recommendations to the Biden-Harris transition team. We were one of 187 organizations that endorsed these recommendations to ensure a strong, equitable child care and early learning system that not only benefits children, families, and early educators but also keeps women in the workforce, increases racial equity, and strengthens our economy for everyone.
Alycia Hardy was quoted about the need for adequate child care funding structure that doesn't place the burden solely on providers, parents, and child care workers.
New York Times article referenced a CLASP report on CCDBG.
CLASP supports the Strengthening Families for Success Act.