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Stevens Urges Treasury, Federal Reserve to Support Struggling Child Care Providers

April 29, 2020

WASHINGTON — Today, Congresswoman Haley Stevens (MI-11) sent a letter to Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin, asking the U.S. Treasury to work with the Federal Reserve to make federal assistance available to struggling child care providers.

According to a recent survey by the Early Care and Education Consortium, major child care providers have experienced a near 75% drop in attendance due to state and local stay-at-home orders, resulting in closures of about 65% of programs. Some of the larger providers have seen an 85% to 90% decline in enrollment. An estimated 3.5 million children of healthcare industry workers need access to childcare, making the child care sector essential to the fight against COVID-19. Widespread permanent closures of child care centers will also hinder economic recovery efforts by making it harder for parents to re-enter the workforce.

In the letter, Congresswoman Stevens asks the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve to expand eligibility criteria to make new loan programs established by the CARES Act, such as the Main Street Loan Facilities and the Primary Market Corporate Credit Facility, accessible to child care providers.

“Child care services are absolutely critical to our economy during this crisis as well as the post-crisis recovery phase,” said Congresswoman Stevens. “We need to ensure that businesses like the Learning Care Group, which is headquartered in Michigan’s 11th District, are able to survive this economic shutdown and can continue to provide child care services to Michigan families. The U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve should provide the necessary financial support to protect the child care sector from total devastation.”

“We applaud Rep. Stevens for her leadership to support the child care industry. We’re doing our utmost to continue providing families with exceptional child care in a safe learning environment, also giving children a sense of comfort and stability in these uncertain times,” said Mark Bierley, Chief Executive Officer, Learning Care Group. “As we’re enabling those in essential roles to continue their critical work, we urge our lawmakers to help us ensure that all families will have access to the high-quality child care needed to help support the path to economic recovery."

The full text of the letter can be found here or below.
 

“Dear Secretary Mnuchin,

I write today to urge you to work with the Federal Reserve to enable providers of early childhood education and childcare services to access programs and facilities established under section 4003(b)(4) of Title IV of the CARES Act.

I cannot overstate the importance of child care services to our economy during this crisis as well as during the critically important post-crisis recovery phase. Currently, an estimated 3.5 million children of health care industry workers need access to childcare, and in most states child care providers have been deemed essential workers in our collective fight against the pandemic.  

Moreover, the child care sector provides crucial services to over 11 million families across America and has a $99 billion economic impact on our nation annually. The loss of major providers of child care services will hinder the ability of parents and guardians to re-enter the workforce once the pandemic ends, and will lead to a significantly slower recovery for the U.S. economy.

Already, the childcare sector is collapsing due to this unprecedented crisis — major child care providers have experienced an approximate 75% drop in attendance due to state and local stay-at-home orders, resulting in closures of about 65% of programs. In fact, some of the largest providers have experienced an 85% to 90% decline in enrollment. Any centers that remain open to provide care for 3.5 million children of health care industry workers on the frontlines of the fight against the pandemic are operating at a loss. This is not sustainable. Many child care providers will close for good without federal assistance. Without quality child care options, American workers will not be able to readily return to the workforce during our recovery efforts.

Mid-to-large child care providers unfortunately have limited access to the programs previously authorized under prior COVID-19 stimulus packages.  For many, the only source of federal assistance available may be under Title IV of the CARES Act. We therefore urge you to work with the Federal Reserve to exercise your statutory flexibility to allow such child care providers to access the programs and facilities already established or to be established under section 4003(b)(4) of Title IV of the CARES Act.  

For example, nothing in section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act imposes a specific credit rating or leverage requirement. Given the clear Congressional intent of the CARES Act to support our workers and the economy during this crisis, those section 13(3) programs and facilities established with funding from the CARES Act such as the Main Street Loan Facilities and the Primary Market Corporate Credit Facility (as well as programs and facilities that may be established going forward) should accordingly provide a broader range of eligibility criteria to enable access by such child care providers.

We appreciate all the work that you and your staff have been doing during this unprecedented crisis”

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