Search
The American Families Plan (AFP) released today by the Biden-Harris Administration reflects the full range of bold proposals needed to transform the economy so it truly works for children, young people, women, and families.
CLASP's statement on the reintroduction of the Child Care for Working Families Act which would transform the nation’s child care system.
CLASP applauds passage of two important child care bills by the U.S. House of Representatives.
New report describes how to support and improve the child care sector during and after the pandemic in a way that addresses long-standing racial and ethnic inequities.
The Child Care is Essential Act would provide $50 billion of critical support to keep the child care sector afloat through the pandemic.
New analysis by CLASP provides state-by-state estimates of how an infusion of $50 billion in the child care system would be distributed.
In new analysis, CLASP--along with the National Women's Law Center and a noted former White House labor economist--calculate that the child care industry needs a public investment of $9.6 billion a month during the pandemic.
Statement from Olivia Golden on coronvirus bill passed by the U.S. Senate.
ALBUQUERQUE—According to a new report, more investment in home visiting, child care assistance, cash assistance, and minimum wage enforcement would significantly improve New Mexico families’ stability and economic outlook. The report, “New Mexico’s Infant Toddler Agenda,” was authored by the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty and the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP).
Olivia Golden issued this statement about the Senate Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies (Labor-HHS) Appropriations bill for FY2020.