Elliot Haspel on the Importance of Universal Childcare
Key Points
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Universal childcare must be treated as a public good, ensuring equitable access for all families regardless of income or location.
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Policies should support both public and private childcare providers to offer families flexible, culturally responsive options.
In this episode of the Getting Smart Podcast, we sit down with Elliot Haspel, a nationally recognized child and family policy expert and author ofย Crawling Behind: America’s Childcare Crisis and How to Fix Itย andย Raising a Nation: 10 Reasons Why Every American Has a Stake in Childcare for All. Together, we explore why universal childcare is not just a family issue but a societal one, rooted in brain science, economic sustainability, and the moral imperative to support children and caregivers. Elliot shares actionable insights on how policymakers, educators, and community leaders can create a mixed-delivery childcare system that prioritizes accessibility, equity, and quality. This episode is a must-listen for anyone invested in the future of education, equity, and the well-being of families. Tune in to learn how we can collectively reimagine childcare as a public right.
Outline
- (00:12) Introduction: Early Childhood Education and Personal Background
- (11:11) Why Childcare Matters for Everyone
- (18:32) Hope and Progress in Childcare Policy
- (27:25) Building Public Will and Expanding the Constituency
- (38:17) Integrating Childcare into Society and Development
- (43:01) Childcare as a Right: Final Thoughts and Call to Action
Introduction: Early Childhood Education and Personal Background
Jordan Luster: You are listening to the Getting Smart podcast, and I’m Jordan, at Getting Smart. I spend a lot of my time with education leaders who are building new modelsโfrom micro schools to personalized learning environmentsโand thinking about what it takes to create a sustainable and equitable system for kids and families.
Today, I’m coming in with this professional lens, but I’m also coming in as a mom of a 6-year-old, as a former first- and third-grade teacher, and as someone who spent a lot of time babysitting, nannying, and working in daycares throughout college.
So, I’m super excited today to talk about early childhood education. I bring that policy curiosity but also the lived experience of being in the thick of things. And that’s why I’m super excited to talk with our guest,ย Elliot Haspel, today. Elliot is a nationally recognized child and family policy expert.
I was just joking with him prior to this call that I’ve been kind of stalking and doing a lot of digging into his work because, once you start to hear about a lot of the challenges and this crisis around early childhood education, you kind of get sucked in.
So, I am excited to share a little bit about his work that bridges these worlds of early childhood education and education policy. He’s the author of Crawling Behind: America’s Childcare Crisis and How to Fix It and his newest book, Raising a Nation: 10 Reasons Why Every American Has a Stake in Childcare for All.
It takes the case even further, and it really just shows that this is an issue for everyone. It dives into what it’ll take to build a system that truly works for families, kids, and everyone. So, I’m happy to have you, Elliot. You and I have similar backgrounds when it comes to Teach For America and starting that journey.
I’d love to hear if you could share a story from your teaching days that kind of led you into early childhood education or made you realize how critical the early years are for learning.
Elliot Haspel:ย Yeah, absolutely. And thank you so much for having me. As you mentioned, I taught fourth grade in a public school outside of Phoenix, and it was a really transformative experience for me. I do remember a storyโthere’s a student I had, and we were doing the diagnostic testing at the beginning of the year. You’re supposed to start at the grade level, and then if they can read that sentence, you move up. If they can’t read that, you go back down. I remember going backโhe was having trouble with the first fourth-grade sentence. We went down to the third grade, then the second grade, and we eventually got down to the kindergarten level. The sentence was, “The dog is big,” and he couldn’t read it.
I remember that afternoon, after school ended, going to the office and looking through his file. I saw how he was passed through kindergarten, first grade, second grade, and third grade. No one had ever flagged that he clearly had learning difficulties in literacy. That didn’t start when he entered kindergarten, right? We know enough about early childhood development to know that the foundations for things like literacy really start at birth. If a child is experiencing difficulties, early interventionโeven when they’re 1, 2, 3, or 4โcan be really, really important. That story hammered home to me that we can’t, even in elementary school, miss opportunities to give students what they need by intervening earlier.
Jordan Luster: Yeah. No, I think that’s why my heart kind of lives in early literacy in first grade. I’m such an advocate for the science of reading, phonics instruction, and structured literacy approaches because of that. But you hit the nail on the headโit starts early. I appreciate your perspective coming in here and really thinking about some of the books that you’ve written and how you have carefully defined who caregivers are. Teachers are caregivers, right? I want you to talk a little bit about that. I know in your latest book, it’s dedicated to “the caregivers in all your wild diversity,” which I love.
Can you explain that a little bit more deeply and share who the caregivers are when you’re speaking about caregivers?
Elliot Haspel:ย Yeah.
Why Childcare Matters for Everyone
Elliot Haspel:ย Yeah, it is absolutely an everyone problem for many reasons. A couple of things that I find particularly compelling are, for one, it really works as social infrastructure for our communities. Childcare programs help parents of young children create friendships and stay rooted in their communities. Iโve heard far too many stories of parents who are engaged, involved in their childโs school, volunteering in the PTO, or active in their local faith community, and then they have a young child and realize, โWe cannot stay here.โ They canโt afford childcare, so they have to moveโnot because they want to, but because thereโs a relative or someone who can provide cheaper care elsewhere.
I also talk about public health and safety. There are many communities where they canโt keep their police, fire, or medical services staffed very well because of childcare breakdowns. People are dropping out of the labor force as a result. You can even talk about the strength of our national security. Interestingly, the best-funded public childcare system in the country is the military childcare system. The military spends $2 billion on childcare for military families versus about $8 billion for the entire rest of the country. The reason is simple: military families have kids, and they need someone to care for them. Itโs interesting that in this one area, we donโt have trouble making the leap that this is something the government needs to participate in.
You can look at any of these angles, and then thereโs certainly the educational angle. Brain development does not start at age five. Kids donโt just suddenly show up in kindergarten and start learning. The brain develops like a houseโthe foundation for early literacy, early numeracy, executive functioning, and socio-emotional skills is all being built starting at birth. For all of these reasons, it really matters.
Itโs interesting because, in some ways, I donโt think people have trouble making the leap of why we need strong public schools. Even if you donโt have kids or your kids are grown, people understand that weโre in deep trouble if we donโt have public schools. But they donโt make that leap for the early years or for childcare because weโve pretended that one is separate from the other. In fact, in some cases, we pit them against each other: โThatโs education, and thatโs babysitting. That doesnโt matter.โ I think we need to talk more explicitly about the ways in which care shapes all of the outcomes we care about as a society.
The last thing Iโll say is that Iโve talked to many families who say, โI would have another child if it wasnโt for the cost of childcare.โ Thatโs stark. When having the number of children you want becomes a luxury thatโs only affordable to affluent families, itโs not the sign of a healthy society. Itโs not the sign of a healthy school system either. If you want enough kids coming up, and weโre already having trouble with enrollment issues in many areas, you definitely want strong childcare.
Jordan Luster: I do a lot of work with microschools, small schools, and independent schools. I think right now in the K-12 space, sustainability is a huge challenge for many school leaders. I know that early care centers have been this financial lifeline and funding stream for many independent schools. Itโs been a way for them to offer a need for the community because we know that quality childcare is scarce. Itโs also a way to maintain and sustain this K-12 system or K-8 or K-5, whatever the school is.
I think what Iโm interested in is, if Iโm a leader and I open up a childcare center, this is a pipeline for enrollment, like you said. Itโs also becoming an additional funding streamโa guaranteed one.
Elliot Haspel:ย Yeah. I think thereโs a tension there, right? It depends on how itโs deployed and in what ecosystem. Weโve seen this a lot around issues of pre-K expansion. Pre-K is a form of childcareโitโs one form of childcare. I could blindfold someone and take them to a pre-K classroom and a really high-quality 4-year-old classroom in a childcare center, and it would be pretty hard to tell the difference.
Letโs say that at the outset. But whatโs interesting is thereโs been this ongoing fight about whether we expand pre-K just through public schools or include community-based providers as well. Different states have come to different answers. California, most notably, expanded their transitional kindergarten only through schools. Itโs been a big challenge for other childcare providers because many of them cross-subsidize their younger children using the 4-year-olds due to the way the ratios and economics work.
Then you get into the question of wanting a pluralistic, inclusive system with all sorts of different options. If youโre just using schools, that can actually work to the detriment of some families who are never going to feel comfortable sending their child into what seems like a school-like setting until the child is of kindergarten age. They might much prefer a family childcare home or the person down the street whoโs licensed and takes a small number of children into their home. They might want that. They might want a relative. There are lots of different things.
This has been a fight thatโs played out in a couple of different states, and different states have landed in different places. I do think there can be some danger if the reason weโre expanding these childcare programs is because we really want a pipeline of kids or we want to make sure the ranks of teachers arenโt declining too much. That can be challenging. I think we want to put it in its proper place, which is an ecosystem of really high-quality, affordable options because thatโs what parents want. Iโll tell you, thereโs no survey of parents Iโve ever seen where 79% of them say they want one kind of care and education when their kids are young. It varies wildly, and itโs dynamic. It changes by the age of the kid. It changes by the circumstances of the family. One size will notโand never willโfit all when it comes to the early years.
Jordan Luster: Yeah, and I think itโs the same thing thatโs happening right now in K-12 systems, where theyโre trying to undo a lot of whatโs been done by providing more personalized options and more choice for families, as well as the just-right learning environments for all kids. I like that you gave some examples of what it might look like to bundle that into the existing system or what it looks like to create its own ecosystem. Honestly, Iโd bet my money on creating a new ecosystem and infrastructure that the K-12 system can then model. So, what gives you hope in overcoming that culture and mindset shift?
Hope and Progress in Childcare Policy
Elliot Haspel:ย Yeah, absolutely. A couple of things give me hope. One is that we have a younger generation of politicians starting to come in on both sides of the political aisle who I think are going to be leaders in this. You can look at everyone from Katie Britt, the senator from Alabamaโa mother of school-aged childrenโto Andy Kim, the senator from New Jersey. Heโs a 43-year-old dad, and heโs talking about this stuff. Jimmy Gomez was on the floor of the House of Representatives wearing his baby a couple of years back. That gives me some hope. I think this generation of politicians coming up understands more viscerally that things like early care and education are now part and parcel of what it means to be a parent in modern America, which is just a little different than some of our politicians who are maybe of a different era, letโs say.
The other thing is that states have been doing some really interesting things. Actually, just this morning, New Mexico announced that theyโre going to be the first state in the country to start enacting universal childcare. That means theyโre going to make it available to every resident of that state without an income means testโfor free. It doesnโt mean that itโs going to be solved overnight, but New Mexico has identified a dedicated funding source and is using that to basically say, โThis is a public good. This isnโt something that should be pay-to-play. This isnโt something where you should have to jump through a bunch of hoops to get aid.โ Much like our public schools, you should just be able to access it, and it should be free for you regardless of whether or not you could afford it. Thatโs exciting. That is new. That discussion was nowhere five years ago.
Youโre even seeing some bipartisan action. Texas, for example, put $100 million of state money into their childcare system in their last legislative session. Thatโs new. So, I do have some hope. The other thing is that I think people broadly understand more and more these issues of brain science and how children learn, as well as the ecosystem of influences on child development.
What I would say is that there are two dangers. One is this continued artificial schism between education and careโthe idea that these are separate things, that one is something the government should have a role to play in and the other is just an individual thing that we donโt value very much. Thatโs one danger. The other danger is if we talk about care just in terms of what it means for parents being able to work and miss the bigger impacts. Itโs interesting. I will say, over the past 10 to 15 years, weโve actually seen the child kind of get taken out of childcare a little bit.
In 2005, the conversation was all about brain science. There had been some big reports that had just come out. It was the โDecade of the Brain.โ We were sort of like, โWow, itโs amazing whatโs going on in the brains of young children.โ That has really been replaced as the dominant narrative around childcare and even early care and education recently with this idea that itโs about parents being able to work. Itโs about labor force participation rates. Itโs about the economyโall of which are valid. But thereโs no rights claim there. Thereโs no moral argument around that.
Whereas if we talk about and assert that care, early care and education, and childcare through the school age should be a rightโjust like public education is a rightโI think we get a whole lot further.
Jordan Luster: You warned us about those two traps: treating care and education like theyโre separate systems and framing childcare as a labor force issue. Iโm wondering, though, what does it look like to shift policies and program design?
Elliot Haspel:ย Absolutely. I think a really concrete example is when you think about pre-K. Pre-K, which is care and education for 4-year-olds, sometimes 3-year-olds, raises the question of how you deliver it. Weโve seen places around the country come to two answers to that question. One set of answers is to do it through the schools. California is probably the most important example of this. Theyโve expanded what they call transitional kindergarten. Itโs basically pre-K, but it is only through the schools. So, the school districts take the money, administer it, and run it. Itโs literally just tacking on a grade to the schools.
Other places, like Boston and other states, have taken more of whatโs called a mixed-delivery approach to pre-K. What that means is that you can be a childcare center and have a pre-K classroom that is taking that money and running it. Boston is a pioneer of this idea. You can be a licensed family childcare homeโnot even a standalone facility, just someone taking a small number of children into your homeโand be a pre-K provider. That breaks down the walls. Itโs not saying, โThis is early education, and thatโs childcare.โ Itโs saying, โThis is a particular funding stream. We have some set of expectations about what we expect to happen as a result of giving you this money, but weโre not going to segment out pre-K as just something that is attached to schools.โ
The negative effect of the California model, and weโve seen this in other places that do school-only pre-K, is that it puts negative downward pressure on childcare providers. Many of them balance their budgets with the 4-year-olds. When you pull all the 4-year-olds out of childcare programs, it makes it even harder for them to operate sustainably. Weโve even seen a decline in infant and toddler slots and a decline in childcare provision. I think thatโs a really concrete way we can say that depending on how you look at it, itโs going to lead you down one of two policy paths.
Jordan Luster: I want to dig into that funding part a little bit more. Given that we work with a lot of leaders who are building newer, innovative educational models, Iโm wondering: Whatโs a single thing that maybe a microschool leader, school leader, or district leader could do to advocate locally for those public dollars? How can they integrate this into the K-12 system without losing people in the weeds? What are steps toward that type of advocacy?
Elliot Haspel:ย I think being able to say, โWe need a mixed-delivery system,โ is actually really powerful coming from school leaders. Part of the challenge when you do the school-only model that we talked about is that not every family wants to send their child to a setting that looks like a public school. They may not feel like theyโre ready for it. They may have an experience in their past that makes them feel like their child is too young. It can be more difficult for those school-based settings to meet cultural or language needs sometimes, or to meet hours needs if itโs a family working nontraditional hours.
Thereโs a way, I think, that if school leaders can stand up and say, โLook, yes, itโs helpful to have this stream of money coming in,โ it can make a difference. Weโve sometimes seen, when ballot initiatives and other policies come up before policymakers, strange tensions between the schools and the childcare providers. Anyone who wants to look at whatโs going on with unions in New York City, for example, will see this. Itโs really weird. You get unions pitted against each other because some of them represent the public school teachers running pre-K in the public schools, and some of them represent the community-based providers. Theyโre not all funded the same. Itโs a mess.
To be able to say, โLook, even if Iโm not going to get quite as many dollars as I might otherwise get, itโs actually better for all of us to have a mixed-delivery system,โ is powerful. More children are going to arrive in school more ready to learn. More families in my community are going to have the type of care they need. I think that can be powerful and potentially recreate some bonds of solidarity. Ultimately, we all want the same thing. We all want kids and families to have what they need. We all want educators to be set up for success. But because of the way weโve carved it up in America, you can create these schisms and divisions that are unhelpful.
Jordan Luster: Yeah, it is an interesting conundrum. I often wonder myself: Are we going to see things kind of fall apart before theyโre able to come together? I kind of thought thatโs what would happen during the pandemic. I think we all had that really big piece of hope, like, โOkay, this is the time to build the system back up from the ground up.โ Iโm interested to know, because I know youโve been doing this work for a while, where do you feel like weโve come since then? I know that was around the time you wrote your first book, and now you have this next book. Where have you seen things shift, and do you still hold that hope, given where we were and where we are now?
Shorts Content
Building Public Will and Expanding the Constituency
Elliot Haspel:ย Iโm sort of an inverted optimist, so I do hold the hope. Weโve seen a few things change since the pandemic. Thereโs absolutely been more attention paid to childcare writ large. The pandemic really shone a bright light on just how important childcare is for our society, our economy, and families. Researchers have found that the number of mentions of childcare policy in the media has significantly increasedโand durably increasedโsince the pandemic. Some of whatโs being talked about is different too. Thereโs more conversation going on around funding and things like that. So thatโs positive.
Weโve seen states make big strides in childcare provision as wellโsome states, at least. Thatโs been encouraging. I think the challenge is: Is what weโre seeing going to translate into wholesale systemic change, or is it going to turn out to be less sustainable in the face of budget pressures? These pressures are coming both from the budget bills that have been passed and from our changing demographics. Especially for schools, this is relevant. This ties into that pre-K conversation. One reason why schools really like pre-K is that it gives them a whole other set of students in an era where we are seeing vastly declining enrollments in public schools. This is due somewhat to the shift to other kinds of schooling, but also just due to the declining birth rate. Weโre seeing lots and lots of closures, and thatโs not going to get any better. That is not projected to get any better. Itโs projected to get worse.
Weโve seen a few states take steps backโnot necessarily states you would expect. Oregon is an interesting example. In their last legislative session, their state legislature cut about $20 million from their state pre-K program. They didnโt want to, but they did because they were facing a pretty significant budget hole, and that wasnโt protected. Thatโs one of the things I call for: We need dedicated funding streams that are protected, that have a way of not rising or falling with a given budget cycle or projection.
I think that remains to be seen. But I do think weโve called the question on whether childcare matters and whether we should be talking about it as a significant matter of public policy. That was not where it was 10 years ago. This conversation in 2015 was very different. There was some stuff going on around pre-K, but the childcare conversation was pretty dormant.
Jordan Luster: Yeah, I feel like now that there are more women in the workforce, and weโre seeing a lot of shared responsibilities between parents at home, and we see dads showing up in ways that maybe the previous generation didnโt do as much, it feels like the stakes are higher for men tooโespecially with the economy and the way things are. Dual-income households are almost needed at this point if you want to continue to have children. That goes back to this lower birth rate conversation and why people are choosing to wait longer.
I think itโs interesting now that itโs becoming a little bit more of a popular issue, and itโs gaining increased attention because itโs now a shared issue. I love the fact that your book points to this not being just an issue for women or lower-income families. This is an everyone issue. I want to talk about that a little bit more. For listeners who havenโt picked it up yet, what is maybe one sentence or the thesis of Raising a Nation?
Elliot Haspel:ย In a sentence: Childcare is and should be treated as an American value, and it should be treated as a right. That is a significant mindset shift.
In a sentence: Childcare is and should be treated as an American value, and it should be treated as a right. That is a significant mindset shift. Even to your point, right? Itโs 2025, and I think close to 70% of children under the age of six have all of their available parents in the workforce. This is an issue that crosses every line of difference you can imagine. It crosses income, geography, partisan ideology, raceโeverything. And yet, we are seeing bits and pieces of victory and bits and pieces of failure, and itโs all generally still pretty bad out there.
My contention is that part of the reason for this is that weโve not convinced the country that this is actually something that belongs in that pantheon of public goods that we put taxpayer dollars behind, make available to everyone, and make free at the point of service. Schools, parks, libraries, roads, fire departments, police departmentsโthese are things that we say, โEven if you could pay for them, weโre not asking you to do that on the front end. Weโre asking you to do it with taxes on the back end because of what it means.โ Itโs the connective tissue that lets our society run.
One challenge that childcare has is that the actual direct constituencyโparents of young childrenโis dwarfed in the electorate by non-parents. Even if you take this up through parents of children under the age of 18, they are still outnumbered. Thatโs going to increase as we have a continually aging electorate. Itโs interesting. Iโve heard this issue compared to things like marriage equality or other important cultural conversations and debates. Those issues donโt have money attached to them, per se. Itโs not like smoking bans, which donโt really have a giant budget. Childcare is expensive. It should be expensive. Itโs an investment, and you get it back, but the outlay of money is significant. Itโs in the billions. If weโre going to do this nationally, itโs in the hundreds of billions, which is fine. We spend $800 billion on K-12 education. There are times when we are willing to spend that money.
But I bring that up to say, if weโre going to get the public will to say, โWe need to fund this at an appropriate rate,โ which is going to mean finding revenue and probably having some hard conversations about taxes, we have got to expand the constituency. Right now, childcare polls very well in a vacuum, but itโs not particularly a salient issue, meaning it doesnโt move voter behavior very muchโparticularly voters who donโt have kids. The book is basically a toolkit that is trying to help people who care about childcare be able to help anyone, regardless of whether they have kids or their ideology, see that they need to be investing and pressuring politicians to invest in a good childcare system.
Jordan Luster: That was such a great synopsis. Itโs interesting when you brought up the case around needing additional revenue and how that brings a conversation around taxes. This is a huge policy issue, and I think there are so many things that need to happen first before we can see certain policy shifts. You talked about this economic case being morally impoverished. I want you to share how you approach conversations with those who donโt have stakes in this and those who are, you know, like, โWell, I donโt have kids, and if you choose to have kids, then you should be able toโฆโ Can we talk about it? Because thatโs what weโre up against.
Elliot Haspel:ย No, absolutely. Obviously, it depends on the person. Part of this is that you have to speak to your audience because everyoneโs different, and everyoneโs values are different. Often, I will approach that conversation in one of two ways. One is to ask, โDo you realize how many choices parents have that are constrained by childcare?โ People tend to agree that families should be able to raise their kids the way they want, stay in the communities they care about, and have strong marriages and strong community roots. If we want that, childcare really matters. Do you realize that having children is becoming a luxury good in this country, where only the rich can afford to have large families? Thatโs one set of conversations.
The other is particularly for people who are stuck at that first level of, โYou had a kid, so you should deal with them yourself.โ Iโll ask them, โWhatโs the next sentence in that logic?โ Okay, you donโt have kids, or your kids are grown. You still pay taxes for the schools in your neighborhood. Why? The answer is going to be something along the lines of, โWell, we need to have an educated workforce. We need to have a strong economy. Our property values are tied to the quality of the schools.โ Well, guess what? If you want an educated workforce, you need to have good childcare from birth through school age. If you want a strong economy, childcare matters because parents do need to work. Your property values are also tied to things like childcare. You can walk them through an analogous logic.
I donโt think many people have trouble with that logicโthe idea that we need schools even though they donโt have kids. Most people have never sat and thought that much about childcare in this more philosophical sense of, โHow do we position it in society?โ Usually, itโs just a one-liner, and then they move on. Iโve written about this before. Itโs interesting. Schoolsโwe all went to school. We all know what school is. We all have memories of school. Not all of us went to childcare as young children. If we did, we probably donโt remember it very much, if at all, because it was when we were very young.
Yet, many boomers didnโt engage in childcare when they were parents because it was a different era. They donโt really know what it is. But when you sit down and talk people through it, even just for a couple of minutes, I actually find that most people come around pretty quickly.
The other thing Iโll add is that it also depends on whether youโre just focusing on childcare as a licensed center or talking about this kind of plurality of options. This idea that weโre also going to support family members who are providing care is important. I think thatโs actually a really important addition to the conversation because it can break down a lot of reflexive barriers. People have in their minds some schema around what weโre talking aboutโtaking young children away from their parents or their mothersโwhich is obviously not whatโs happening. But we have to get past that heuristic.
Integrating Childcare into Society and Development
Jordan Luster: Yeah, I keep going back to this thought, and this is something that one of my colleagues and I have been thinking aboutโjust how do we weave in bringing children back into our lives and not just a subset of our lives? How do we weave childcare into our everyday lives in society? What does it look like to create policy around requiring that of developers and requiring that of employers, the same way there are protections around maternal care? Although those protections should be expanded at a federal level, what does that look like?
I live in Atlanta. We continue to see these huge outdoor mixed-use shopping and living spaces with a big green space in the middle. What does it look like to require developers to include affordable childcare facilities within that? Or what does it look like for a corporation thatโs building a huge development? How do we require them to embed that within their development and then offer that as a service?
Elliot Haspel:ย Yeah, you know, itโs a great point. I mean, I think my magic wand is called taxes, right? It is interesting because we donโt ask employers to provide elementary school or the third grade to their employees. What we say is, โWeโre going to tax you, and weโre going to use all of your tax dollars and roll them in with everyone elseโs tax dollars to provide it through the government for free.โ That doesnโt mean that the government has to run everything. Thatโs really important. People get caught up on this idea that government-funded means government-run. A good example of this is Medicare. You can go to a private medical clinic and get your care from your doctor there, and theyโre getting reimbursed through the government, but itโs not a government-run clinic like the VA. You can do that for childcare.
I think the developer thing is interesting. By the way, a few places do that. Boston is another example. They require developers to pay a fee or include childcare in their developments. But I think this comes back to the question of whether we can assert childcare as a right. Itโs interesting because in Georgia, Colorado, and every other state in the country, thereโs a right to public education in the state constitution. Every government is obligated to provide a system of free public schools. Are those public schools all excellent and equitable? Absolutely not. Are they all free? Yes. Does anyone have to be on a waitlist for their local public school? No. On those fronts, we have a system that, while imperfect, is at least accessible.
Should public school teachers be paid much more? Sure. But at least theyโre getting a decent salary with benefits. The market is not going to solve this problem. It cannot, it will not, and it will never solve childcare. Itโs had 50 years to try, so we can say that with pretty good certainty. The corporations are never going to solve childcare either. They donโt have the capacity to provide enough care. Amazon and McDonaldโs arenโt providing childcare for all of their frontline employees. Even the ones that do have onsite centers are pretty limited in scope. Thatโs not to say those canโt be part of a publicly funded system. In other countries, they are. Onsite childcare is part of a publicly funded system.
But it all comes down to what the system should look like. I think thatโs the question we need to really push on. In my view, this should be a fully publicly funded, mixed-delivery system. Private providers, family membersโeveryone should be included. It should be a system that is a right for everyone and free at the point of service. That is just a fundamentally different place and vision than where we often talk about childcare in this country. When we talk about a mental flip, thatโs what weโre going to have to make.
New Mexico, as we just said, is going to make childcare universal and free for everyone. I think the promise might be outstripping the reality a little bit, but as a framing, as a narrative, as a way of saying, โWe are now going to stop means-testing this,โ itโs powerful. The richest New Mexican is going to have access to this for free at the point of service. Weโre going to pay for it all through tax dollars and other revenues. Thatโs really exciting and the result of a decade-plus of dogged organizing and advocacy by folks on the ground and leadership with the governor there.
This goes back to your hope question. Weโre hearing a little bit more of the language and framing that I think is needed than we were hearing even a year or two ago. We need to capture that momentum and run with it in some ways.
Childcare as a Right: Final Thoughts and Call to Action
Jordan Luster: Yes, it definitely gives me hope, especially what New Mexico is doing. I think you really hit the nail on the head with this idea of childcare as a right, kind of bringing us back to where we started. This isnโt separate from education. Early childhood is education. It is a part of education that we need, and we need to start looking at early childhood care as education. Weโve already discussed the academic outcomes and the implications around the workforce and the economy, but this is a right. Weโre talking about children here, and weโre also talking about caregivers too.
Iโm excited to really dive into your book a little bit further. Iโm excited to share it with our audience. If thereโs one thing you could leave the audience with as just a charge, as a step forward, what would that be?
Elliot Haspel:ย I think itโs what we talked about, right? My charge is to start talking about childcare as a right. Early care, childcare, and school-age careโitโs all part of the same system. I donโt think we should create artificial divisions. Start talking about it as a right and see what happens. Why is it that for the first five years of life and outside the school year and the school day, we leave parents largely on their own, but from the time a child hits kindergarten through the time theyโre 18, we provide them free education and care for at least seven hours a day, 180 days a year?
Yes, we know the historical reasons for this, but why do we still do that? Does that still make any sense? If not, why do we accept it? Letโs do something about it because we donโt have to have this system. We can choose to change it.
Jordan Luster: Yes, I love that. Be the change that you want to see because this isnโt just someone elseโs issueโitโs all of our issue. I appreciate that, and I appreciate your time today. We will include a link to your book in our show notes and recap, and I encourage everyone listening to check it out and bring some of these ideas into your own conversations. Weโre approaching the holiday seasonโstir things up at the table.
Elliot Haspel:ย Right.
Jordan Luster: As always, thank you again for listening to the Getting Smart podcast. Itโs been a pleasure.
Elliot Haspel:ย Thanks, Jordan.
Guest Bio
Elliot Haspel is a nationally-recognized child and family policy expert and commentator, with specialties in child care as well as the linkage between early childhood and climate change. He is the author of Crawling Behind: Americaโs Childcare Crisis and How to Fix It (Black Rose, 2019) and the forthcoming Raising a Nation: 10 Reasons Every American Has a Stake in Child Care for All (Oxford University Press, 2025).
Elliot has appeared on television as an analyst, including on The PBS NewsHour with Judy Woodruff, and his writings have appeared in a wide variety of top publications such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Atlantic. Elliot is regularly sought out by journalists, and has been quoted in such mediums as NPR, Bloomberg, and TIME Magazine. He also writes a monthly column for the web magazine Early Learning Nation. He has been the keynote speaker at numerous early childhood events and has been asked to both join and moderate major panel discussions. In 2021, Elliot testified before the U.S. House of Representatives on the care economy.
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