Call to Action: Tell DC Council to Fund Subsidized Child Care

How much money were you making in 2004? Could you survive on that today? Maybe, maybe not. Might be a stretch but hey, times are tough. How about 27% of what you were making in 2004, could you survive on that? Unless 2004 was a real banner year and you made ten times what you’re making today, maintaining your lifestyle on that money would be impossible. If you were making less than the median income for Washington, DC in 2004, then 27% of that amount won’t even meet your basic needs.

Yet the DC Government refuses to pay child care providers who accept the city’s subsidized child care vouchers, more than 27% of the rate they should have been paid in 2004. Aaron Brooks, owner of Power To Become Child Care Center and Jeffrey Credit, owner of Community Child Development Center are more than a little peeved about the situation. They let the city council know during a day of lobbying at the Wilson Building headed by Empower DC child care organizer Sequnely Gray. The following video lays out their argument.

Despite a $417 million surplus in the city’s budget, Mayor Vincent Gray and the DC City Council are unlikely to increase funding for DC’s subsidized child care program unless someone like you accepts the challenge and makes them change their minds. Contact your city council members and tell them to fund subsidized child care. Here are their phone numbers and email addresses:

Councilmember Phil Mendelson
(202) 724-8032 pmendelson@dccouncil.us

At-Large Councilmember Anita Bonds
(202) 724-8064 abonds@dccouncil.us

At-Large Councilmember David Grosso
(202) 724-8105 dgrosso@dccouncil.us

At-Large Councilmember David Catania
(202) 724-7772 dcatania@dccouncil.us

At-Large Councilmember Vincent Orange
(202) 724-8174 vorange@dccouncil.us

Ward 1 Councilmember Jim Graham
(202) 724-8181 jgraham@dccouncil.us

Ward 2 Councilmember Jack Evans
(202) 724-8058 jevans@dccouncil.us

Ward 3 Councilmember Mary Cheh
(202) 724-8062 mcheh@dccouncil.us

Ward 4 Councilmember Muriel Bowser
(202) 724-8052 mbowser@dccouncil.us

Ward 5 Councilmember Kenyan McDuffie
(202) 724-8028 kmcduffie@dccouncil.us

Ward 6 Councilmember Tommy Wells
(202) 724-8072 twells@dccouncil.us

Ward 7 Councilmember Yvette Alexander
(202) 724-8068 yalexander@dccouncil.us

Ward 8 Councilmember Marion Barry
(202) 724-8045 mbarry@dccouncil.us

Doing Right By the District’s Children

Who is OSSEChild care in Washington DC is vital for a family to work, live, and participate in the community in a positive way. Without proper child care, parents- particularly single parents- may be forced to cut back their work hours, turn down promotions, or even quit their stable jobs. For the children, these early years provide the foundation for their future development; quality child care prepares children for success in school. Child care is increasingly expensive and many families cannot afford it on their own wages. In the District, the average yearly child care cost for an infant/toddler is $18,200. These are clear facts that have been widely documented.

So then why is funding for subsidies continually cut? Why are reimbursement rates for providers so low that they can’t afford to provide high quality care?

Child care advocates all over the District have been working for years to right the funding wrongs of the Office of State Superintendent of Education (OSSE). Funding for the child care subsidy program has been slashed dramatically while the need for these subsidies continues to grow at a steady pace. Last year, the council passed a budget that cut $5.7 million; in the last five years subsidies have been cut nearly $30 million. This is 1,600 families that were unable to participate in the subsidy program. This is 1,600 families who could not get child care.

This year, in the Mayor’s released budget, the child care subsidy/voucher program made it to #1 on his wish list. Child care should not be a “wish” because the money is there. The District has enough funds and new sources of revenue to restore the money that has been taken away from this program.

In fiscal year 2014, the childcare subsidy/voucher program will lose another 1.5 million dollars due to sequestration. This budget cut affects about 80 more families who need childcare subsidies to work, attend school and seek employment. However, the District of Columbia has the money to replace what is being cut. DC has generated over 400 million dollars of extra revenue for the city in the past year but they put all of it in the bank. Meanwhile, parents are still having challenges getting childcare vouchers and their children are missing out on an early start in education.  The mayor and his team regularly say how much they care about families and, in particular, vulnerable children in this city. They sure have a funny way of showing it.  Now it’s up to the Council to plug the leak in childcare subsidies. We need to restore the lost funding for childcare subsidies and give higher reimbursement rates for childcare providers. Because DC doesn’t work without childcare.

In D.C., parents miss work, lose jobs trying to get child-care subsidy

Cross-Posted from the Washington Post
written by BrigidAndria & Princess Kassidy Schulte

At 6:30 a.m. on a Wednesday early this month, Andria Swanson, dressed in a bright-pink terry cloth jumpsuit, joined a line that was already snaking down South Capitol Street in Congress Heights.

She nervously counted the people ahead of her.

“I’m number 19,” she said. “That means I’ll get in today.” At number 20, she said, caseworkers close the doors and tell you to come back another day.

Ahead of her in line, Joelle Flythe had been waiting, for the third day in a row, since 5 a.m. The first person in line had arrived at 3:45 a.m.

This was Swanson’s second trip of the week to the Congress Heights Service Center, the only place run by the city where poor and working-poor parents can apply for a subsidy to help pay for child care.

It will not be her last.

Over the past two years, Swanson said, she has repeatedly waited in line at this office, once for more than nine hours as she missed work and college classes. She’s made multiple trips after caseworkers told her she needed more paperwork. At one point, she said, she missed so much work trying to get the child-care subsidy that she lost her job, landed in a shelter and went on welfare.

Last month, Swanson began a job for the grass-roots advocacy nonprofit group Empower DC, tasked with helping improve the very subsidy process she has found so frustrating. So on this particular morning, she asked another mother to hold her place in line while she interviewed people about their experiences and asked them to sign a petition to improve the system.

“This process is hell,” Swanson said. “H-E-L-L.”

It’s never been easy for low-income parents in the District to secure high-quality child care. But now the stakes are very high.

This fall, the District will begin limiting how long families can stay on welfare to five years. Liberals and conservatives agree that affordable child care is essential in moving people off welfare and into jobs and in helping them keep those jobs.

But that goal is greatly complicated by the realities of the city’s child-care subsidy program — with its counterproductive system for receiving and renewing benefits, its inadequate funding for the subsidies themselves and the lack of child-care centers willing to accept the vouchers.

City officials agree that the system is flawed. “The process needs a lot of fixing,” said David Berns, director of the Department of Human Services.

As many as 25,000 people apply for child-care subsidies every year, he said, but the city has only seven caseworkers to determine eligibility.

Berns said he has successfully lobbied for funding from the Division of Early Learning to increase staff at the Congress Heights Service Center by seven or eight. His department also hopes to begin streamlining the subsidy process next fall, he said. And in two years, he said, a new computer system should enable parents to apply for subsidies online.

“We have a real sense of urgency,” said Deborah Carroll, director of DHS’s Economic Security Administration. “You can’t get a job if you can’t put your kid in child care.

CLICK HERE to read the entire article at the WashingtonPost.com.   

I’ve reposted the comments that followed the above Washington Post article because they represent the kind of mentality that helps keep DC Government from fully funding the subsidized child care program.  I hope they are not representative of all Washington Post readers.   They’re actually difficult to find (I had to click on the photo gallery to get to them) which may explain why only seven people commented.   I’m just using the abbreviations for those posters who used their real names.

Baby Huey in the City wrote:
STOP having babies, if you CAN’T take care of them! It’s that simple

ABS wrote:
She just stuck her foot in her mouth… How can she receive Unemployment, is currently employed, has an employed fiance AND receive public assistance–AND STILL COMPLAINING? Hummm….

cr1957ny wrote:
I still do not understand how someone who is 22 or 23 years old and doesn’t have a pot to go in has 2-3 kids already. It just seems really irresponsible, and why should others have to support that irresponsibility? If you don’t have a job that pays well enough to support a child, stop having them! Get married. I mean, really. I feel bad for the kids, but this constant subculture thing about popping babies out with multiple fathers and then bemoaning not getting support for them is real tired.

CLS responds:
moocher, moocher, moocher – she know’s the government will pay and has zero responsibility for her actions.

hill_guy wrote:
I recognize the trunk on that car in the photo – that’s a brand new Hyundai Sonata she’s loading groceries into. Why am I subsidizing her childcare when she’s driving around in a $22,000 car?

DCnative1983 responds:
Wow, I wondered the same thing and her daughter’s sneakers are no less than $65.00, hmmm gifts from a family member maybe? I think not.

RoccoFan wrote:
Thicker than a snicker. I apologize. That was wrong and uncalled for. True, but still uncalled for in this context.

Little_Black_Duck wrote:
On average it costs parents $18,200 per year, per child to keep a child in an unsubsidized child care program in the District of Columbia. It might indeed be better if only people who can afford to pay that much money for child care were allowed to have children. One possible benefit is that most, if not all of you who have submitted the ever so enlightened comments above, would probably not now exist.

Bonds: What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You

CLICK HERE to take action today! Tell the DC Council to stop protecting a tax shelter for millionaires!Rich-People

The Fair Budget Coalition has put out another action alert through the progressive list serves. Apparently, the Mayor and many City Council members are fighting to protect tax exemptions on out-of-state bonds. Being not wealthy enough to own stocks and bonds, I don’t even know what a bond is. So, I looked it up.

A bond is a sum of money that an investor loans to a company or the government. For example, U.S. citizens were encouraged to buy war bonds from the Federal Government during World War II. In this way, the government was able to raise the money needed to pay for the added cost of The War. What did the citizens who bought these bonds get out of the deal? The same thing that a bank or your local payday lender gets out of you when you ask for a loan. Interest. The company you buy the bond from will agree to pay back the money you’ve loaned them with interest. Generally, bond holders get an interest payment twice a year and then get the full amount they loaned to the company or government entity on an agreed upon date (the maturity date), which is usually some years after the original purchase.

In short, like a bank, buying a bond allows an investor to loan out some money, get the money back and a bunch of interest to boot. This is one of the ways middle-class folks with extra money and really wealthy people with a lot of money, accumulate more money without actually having to work for it. But it gets better. Or worse generally depending on where your income falls.

The mayor and many on the city council are proposing that the income that investors “earn” from the bonds they buy from out-of-state companies should not be taxed. Why?! According to the Fair Budget Coalition’s Action Alert this will cost the city $30 million in revenue. Hm? What could the city do with $30 million dollars? Help get the families living in DC General into homes of their own perhaps? Fund DC’s subsidized child care program so that parents who want to work or go to school can afford to do so, maybe?

To be fair, there are some DC residents with low or moderate incomes who rely on the interest from their out-of-state bonds to help make ends meet. So the Fair Budget Coalition supports offering the tax exemptions to those residents with low or moderate incomes. But giving up $30 million, so that folks who are already wealthy can just get wealthier is beyond me. We should not have to foot the bill for a millionaire’s tax shelter, especially when it depletes the money available for social programs.

The Fair Budget Coalition’s Action Alert goes on to say:

The DC’s Office of Tax and Revenue revealed that over three-fourths of tax-exempt interest income earned by DC residents goes to households who have income of $200,000 or more beyond what they earn from tax-exempt bonds. In fact, 43% of all tax-exempt interest earned on these bonds are earned by a small percentage of DC households who in 2010 made an average of $2 million from that interest.

But right now ALL millionaires who owned Out-of-State bonds before the tax took effect in 2011 still don’t have to pay taxes on their bonds. When the tax was originally passed by the Council, they added a “grandfather clause” to only put the tax on any new bonds but not existing ones. As we tell the Council NOT to repeal the Out-of-State bond tax, we must also tell them to extend that tax to ALL millionaires.

So TAKE ACTION TODAY to demand that Council choose to fund human needs and NOT a millionaire’s tax shelter!

CLICK HERE to take action today! Tell the DC Council to stop protecting a tax shelter for millionaires!

Call to Action: Help End Homelessness in DC

Still_Waiting_For_Housing_SignTell DC Council to Invest in the Programs that will End Homelessness for DC Residents!

Visit this link: http://bit.ly/10bBDQw

As part of the FY 2014 Budget Support Act (BSA), DC Mayor Vincent C. Gray has proposed significant changes to the Homeless Services Reform Act (HSRA), the law governing homeless services in DC. Not only will the proposed changes do little to resolve the crisis of family homelessness, but if enacted, could cause significant harm to homeless residents.

Nearly 200 DC organizations signed on to a letter to the Mayor asking him to withdraw these amendments from the BSA because they had not been vetted by stakeholders and because such significant changes deserve their own legislative process. Councilmember Graham is now leading the effort to remove these amendments (Subtitle D, The Homeless Services Reform Amendment Act of 2013) from the BSA and has introduced them as stand-alone legislation, which will give the public and stakeholders an opportunity for meaningful input.

As Fair Budget members, we know the best way to address homelessness is to ensure that housing is provided right now to DC residents experiencing homelessness,  not by implementing changes in the law that could negatively impact both families and individuals.

That’s why we want to tell the DC Council to invest in housing and to support Councilmember Graham’s efforts.

The solution is housing!  With a total investment of $8.5 million in the Housing First Program, $10.3 million in tenant-based Local Rent Supplement Program vouchers, we can end homelessness for 300 homeless families, for every DC senior, and for every resident with HIV/AIDS. And an investment of $5.1 million in supportive housing, shelter beds, and wrap-around services will help end homelessness for over 100 chronically homeless youth.

Go to this link to email the DC Council today!: http://bit.ly/10bBDQw

Then Join the Fair Budget Coalition at the following event:

The “ONE CITY NEEDS” Lobby Day Action
Wed, May 15TH
10:00am-12:00pm
At the Wilson Building
(1350 Pennsylvania Ave NW)

For more information please email: janelle@fairbudget.org or call 202-328-5513