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These cities raised taxes – for child care. How it’s changing parents’ lives.

Last summer, Derrika Richard felt stuck.

She didn’t have enough money to afford child care for her three youngest children, ages 1, 2, and 3. Yet the demands of caring for them on a daily basis made it impossible for Ms. Richard, who cuts and styles hair from her home, to work. One child care assistance program rejected her because she wasn’t working enough. It felt like an unsolvable quandary: Without care, she couldn’t work; and without work, she couldn’t afford care.  

But Ms. Richard’s life changed in the fall, when, by way of a new city-funded program for low-income families called City Seats, she enrolled the three children at Clara’s Little Lambs, a child care center in the Westbank neighborhood of New Orleans. For the first time, she’s earning enough to pay her bills and afford online classes.    

Why We Wrote This

Local governments are stepping in to assist parents facing child care hurdles. How are these efforts, funded by voters, changing the landscape? Part of the series “Fixing the Child Care Crises” from the Education Reporting Collaborative.

“It actually paved the way for me to go to school,” Ms. Richard says on a spring morning after walking the children to their classrooms. It’s “changed my life.”  

Last year, New Orleans added more than 1,000 child care seats for children from low-income families after voters approved a historic property tax increase in 2022. The referendum raised the budget of the program seven-fold – from $3 million to $21 million a year for 20 years. Because Louisiana’s early childhood fund matches money raised locally for child care, the city gets an additional $21 million to help families find care.

New Orleans is part of a growing trend of local communities passing ballot measures to expand access to child care. In Whatcom County, Washington, a property tax increase added $10 million for child care and children’s mental health to the county’s annual budget. A marijuana sales tax approved by voters in Anchorage, Alaska, last year will generate more than $5 million for early childhood programs, including child care.

Ariel Gilreath/The Hechinger Report

Derrika Richard walks her three youngest children to their child care classrooms at ClaraÕs Little Lambs on a March morning in New Orleans.

The state of Texas has taken a somewhat different tack. In November, voters there approved a state constitutional amendment that allows property tax relief for qualifying child care providers. Under this provision, cities and counties can choose to exempt a child care center from paying all or some of its property taxes. 

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