
Photo: Kate Samp for Strategies for Children
It’s that time of year.
Time for Boston parents and guardians with children ages 0 to 5 to respond to the city’s Child Care Census, a survey about child care needs.
The survey is available online and can be taken in seven different languages. Boston residents can also fill out a paper copy of the survey that was mailed to all Boston residents.
Please ask the Boston parents and guardians that you know to respond!
The survey will help the City of Boston learn more about child care needs and do a better job of meeting them.
Now is a great time to speak up, because Boston Mayor Michelle Wu recently announced “the creation of the Office of Early Childhood to advance the administration’s commitment to universal, affordable, high-quality early education and care for all children under five.”
The office will be led by Kristin McSwain who “brings more than ten years of experience as the Executive Director of the Boston Opportunity Agenda.”
The goal is to “address needs highlighted in Boston’s 2021 Childcare Census Survey report.” Among the report’s key findings:
• families are relying on “parent/guardian care” more often than the would like to
• 81% of respondents who rely on a parent/guardian care arrangement for their children are women, and caring for children interfering with their career desires
• respondents with 3-5 year old children “strongly prefer public/charter school care arrangements, but are not able to access them,” and
• “the average cost of center-based care is greater than the Massachusetts state average, which is already the 2nd highest in the nation behind only Washington, D.C.”
To get an even clearer picture of the current need, Boston needs to hear from families!
So, please reach out to young children’s parents and guardians and ask them to take the survey.
It would be great if all of Boston’s families participated, so that all families’ needs could be heard.
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