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SALT LAKE CITY — Reliable child care is hard to come by for Utahns, according to data from a recent report. And local experts say more than half of Utah families have both parents working outside the home.
"Fifty-four percent of children under age 6 live in families with a need," said child care policy advocate Erin Jemison. "If we want our economy to keep running, if we want businesses to be able to find employees — which is arguably their number one concern right now in this tight labor market — those employees often need child care."
And when those employees don't have reliable child care, fewer people can enter the workforce. And that's when we're already seeing the impacts of the Great Resignation.
State lawmakers resurrected and passed a bill that lets in-home care providers care for more children at once. Until this bill passed, child care providers in your home could only care for four children at once. Now they can care for up to six.
Lawmakers also gave money to centers that contract with employers, but advocates call this a blip in the state's overall need.
The day care industry is also struggling more so than others for workers. The Wells Fargo study shows "employment" in the day care industry is 12% below pre-pandemic levels. The report shows a lot of day care workers left over low pay and early pandemic shutdowns.