Legalized Neglect of Children at Risk

Rinku Sen is president of the Applied Research Center and Publisher of ColorLines Magazine. I found this guest post she wrote very compelling, for it is so often the voices of children most in need that are least heard by our policy makers. But there is something we can do about it. Read on…

As our state legislatures struggle with impending budget deficits, American families are going to be presented with a bunch of terrible “choices.” Do we want less healthcare or affordable housing? Fewer teachers or trash collectors? Childcare policy has gotten very little attention, but devoting resources to ensuring the safety and early education of kids in subsidize day care needs to go to the top of our agenda. As we see in this video and in our new report at the Applied Research Center, “Underprotected, Undersupported,” state childcare policy too often constitutes “Legalized Neglect” of the low-income children, as always disproportionately of color, who deserve so much better.

A handful of leading childcare advocates have pointed out the recession’s devastating impact on the childcare industry and parents’ ability to pay for childcare. We need federal and state governments to provide more support to low-income families as we shift “from a culture of greed to a culture of care” in the United States which ranks 18th out of 25 other developed nations on early childhood education according to Save the Children’s 2009 State of the World’s Mothers Report.

But our childcare licensing and inspection systems also need a major overhaul if we’re going to do more than just warehouse kids. In fourteen states, for example, you essentially don’t need a full license to operate a childcare center. Requirements vary, but policies and practices in these states often allow significant exemptions to their childcare standards and regulations – including child-staff ratios and even basic health and safety standards like criminal background checks and regular inspections. In the case of Alabama, deregulation of childcare centers removed the expectation of any inspections at all. While some unlicensed centers that we visited were of excellent quality, concern is growing about the small storefront centers exploiting the state’s “faith-based” exemption to avoid basic standards and inspections while simultaneously benefiting from state subsidies for “caring” for low-income kids. Call yourself a church, and avoid the cost of proper licensing.

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The Great Scrotum Flap

Did you read the New York Times front-page article by Julie Bosman on school librarians’ censorship of a Newberry Award-winning children’s book “The Higher Power of Lucky”?

It’s creating quite a flap as well it should. I wrote the following letter to Cleveland Plain Dealer columnist Connie Schultz in response to her excellent column “One Word Ignites Some Librarians’ Ire.”

Re: Your great column on the great scrotum flap

Dear Connie,

Yesterday morning when I read the piece about “The Higher Power of Lucky” in the NY Times, I immediately sat down to write an op ed myself. But I could not come close to the one you wrote and I want to thank you for it. In particular, your sharing of the personal story is always the most compelling truth.

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