Today, U.S. Senators Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Bob Casey, (D-PA) and Tina Smith (D-MN) announced that they plan to introduce a new bill allocating mandatory funding to build child care availability over the long term and treat child care like the infrastructure it is for families. 

The coronavirus pandemic has been damaging to the child care sector, with an estimated two in five providers at risk of closing permanently.

The American Rescue Plan provided more than $40 billion to stabilize the sector.

Even before the pandemic, though, many families faced "child care deserts" where there were not sufficient affordable, high-quality child care slots for every child who needed one. 

"Closing a childcare center not only impacts the children and the workers at that facility, but it also means a parent has to consider other options like leaving the workforce to ensure their children are cared for," said Senator Brown. "The pandemic has highlighted the vulnerabilities in our childcare system and made clear that we need comprehensive investments to get the industry back on solid footing.

"Just like roads and bridges that allow people to get to work, child care is critical infrastructure that makes all other work possible," said Senator Warren. "Our goal can't just be to stabilize an already broken system. We need long-term, structural investments to our child care system and we're calling for this proposal to be included in the upcoming spending packages moving through Congress." 

The Senators' new child care bill will help close the child care gap by providing new permanent Federal funding to allow child care providers to invest in facility upgrades, support new child care providers to open, help existing providers expand or upgrade their programs, train and invest in the child care workforce, and provide other technical and financial support to child care providers. 

The legislation will: 

• Expand Mandatory Child Care Funding: Permanently increase annual funding to the Child Care Entitlement to States (CCES) program that received an emergency infusion of approximately $633 million per year in the American Rescue Plan.

• Provide Mandatory Funding to Improve Child Care Supply, Quality, and Affordability: Create permanent grants to improve child care supply, quality, and affordability, particularly in areas that lack options for affordable child care.