U.S. childcare in short supply as burned-out workers quit, new hires
hard to find
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[September 01, 2021]
By Jonnelle Marte
(Reuters) - Rochelle Wilcox, the owner of
three childcare centers in New Orleans, receives 10 to 15 phone calls
nearly every day for each school from parents asking if there is space
for their children.
But Wilcox has to turn them away. While her enrollment is not yet back
to pre-pandemic levels, she doesn't have the staff to take on more
students.
"I have to say that we’re full," said Wilcox, who capped the wait list
for the three schools at 140 children, compared to the more typical
range of 45 to 60. She estimates the schools could accept nearly 40 more
children if she could hire 10 more staffers.
Childcare centers across the country are struggling to find enough
qualified educators to be fully staffed for back-to-school season, an
obstacle that has some schools reducing planned enrollment and cutting
back hours. Owners of childcare centers say more workers are quitting
and fewer people than usual are applying for open positions.
The staffing crunch is further limiting childcare options for
parents eager to get back to work. It also creates more hurdles for
working mothers, who were disproportionately pushed out of the labor
market h when schools went virtual and childcare centers closed because
of the pandemic.
Without reliable childcare, it will become more difficult for those
parents to return to steady work schedules, economists say, potentially
slowing a labor market recovery that many had hoped would get a jolt as
schools reopened this fall and which becomes even more critical as
enhanced jobless benefits expire in September.
Four out of five early childhood educators working at childcare centers
said they were understaffed in late June and early July, according to a
survey https://www.naeyc.org/about-us/news/press-releases/survey-childcare-centers-understaffed
by the National Association for the Education of Young Children. More
than one in three respondents said they were thinking about leaving or
shutting down their centers this year.
Recruiting childcare workers has always been difficult because wages are
typically low - workers earn a median of $12 an hour according to the
Labor Department - and the work is demanding. But those challenges were
exacerbated by the pandemic, which put workers' health at risk and, with
many quitting, created greater responsibilities for those who remained
on the job.
The renewed focus on the workforce is leading to a national conversation
about early childhood educators and what needs to change to provide them
with more opportunities and reduce turnover.
"I think what we’re going through right now is a revaluing of care work
and understanding that care work is the work that makes all other work
possible," said Mara Bolis, associate director of women's economic
rights for Oxfam America.
BURNING OUT
Employment of child daycare workers plunged by 36% at the start of the
pandemic after many centers shut down, greater than the roughly 15% drop
in employment seen in the U.S. labor market overall, according to Labor
Department data. Childcare employment was still down 11% from
pre-pandemic levels as of July, compared to a 4% shortfall for the labor
market overall.
Some workers leaving the industry now say they are worried about the
health risks or are burning out after being asked to work longer hours
with less support. Some people are moving into more lucrative roles as
nannies, which came into higher demand during the pandemic with daycare
centers shuttering and as more families opted to keep their children at
home.
Amanda Chugg worked through the early part of the pandemic at a
childcare center based in a hospital campus in Portland, Oregon. But she
left in May of 2020 because too many of her colleagues were showing up
to work sick and she was concerned about exposing her roommate, who is
immunocompromised, to COVID-19.
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Rochelle Wilcox, the owner of three child care centers, poses for a
portrait in her office at Wilcox's Academy of Early Learning in New
Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., August 24, 2021. Picture taken August 24,
2021. REUTERS/Kathleen Flynn
"Having people coming to work sick is not uncommon in
childcare," said Chugg, 26, who now works as a nanny taking care of
two children, ages four and six. "But with the onset of COVID it got
to a place where it was untenable for me."
Jordan Potts, 21, realized it was time for a change after being
asked to work multiple 12-hour shifts because the center she worked
at in north Texas was short-staffed. Many of the teachers hired to
help would leave after a week or two.
"It kind of clicked, the burnout," said Potts, who quit in August
after about three years in the industry. Instead of caring for a
room of about 10 one-year olds, Potts is now working as a full-time
nanny caring for a five-month old baby. While her pay is about the
same, her responsibilities as a nanny are more manageable, said
Potts, who will start college in January and wants to be an
elementary school teacher.
SEEKING SOLUTIONS
Owners of childcare centers say they want to boost wages to retain
more workers. But they argue they are limited in terms of how much
more they can offer before they have to start raising tuition -
putting more pressure on families already struggling to afford
childcare.
That tension is not new, but some childcare center owners feel they
are competing more intensely with retailers, restaurants and other
businesses that are better able to increase pay or sweeten benefits
to attract more workers during the pandemic.
Wilcox, the owner of the childcare centers in New Orleans, increased
hourly wages for all of her staff this spring, going from a range of
$10 to $13 per hour to a range of $12 to $16. But she still hasn't
been able to fill all of her openings.
In addition to better wages, early childhood educators say they need
more opportunity for growth within the field, support from staff and
broader access to health insurance, sick time and other benefits.
Megan Ahern initially envisioned she would spend her evenings coming
up with creative lesson plans when she started teaching
pre-Kindergarten full-time in Eugene, Oregon, in September of 2020.
But after struggling to afford groceries on her teacher paycheck
alone, the 25-year-old started delivering food through Uber Eats
after school. She worked close to 12 hours a day between the two
jobs.
Ahern, who quit the school at the end of August, said she didn't
have the resources needed for her classroom, which included some
children with special needs. Some of the children would hit, bite or
pee on her. She was so overwhelmed she often found herself shedding
tears during her 30-minute lunch breaks.
Ahern's pay was increased to $17 an hour from $13 an hour in early
August, but it wasn't enough to change her mind. "Ideally I’ll be
able to come back to working with kids at some point," said Ahern,
who plans to keep delivering food until she finds another job. "But
I just need a break."
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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