Michigan aims to boost child care supply by helping entrepreneurs cut red tape

Michigan lost 637 child care programs since the start of the pandemic, a 7% loss that exacerbated families’ difficulties finding child care in many parts of the state.

Michigan officials are betting they can begin to reverse that trend by helping would-be providers navigate an opening process that can be dizzyingly complex.

A new initiative, Our Strong Start, pairs child care entrepreneurs with a staffer from the state licensing agency who provides help with paperwork and obtaining inspections.

Our Strong Start seeks to address problems raised in a recent MuckRock report, “Disappearing Day Care,” which found that Michigan’s child care supply is even more limited than experts thought. The state has about 264,000 slots available for newborns to 5-year-olds, while Michigan is home to more than 559,000 children younger than 5.

More:Michigan’s child care crisis worse than policymakers believe

More:Long waitlists, low pay vex Michigan child care providers

Can Michigan open 1,000 new child care programs by 2024?

Child care providers were the first educators to return to work in person during the pandemic. While federal relief money helped many programs stay open, some providers opted to shut down rather than deal with the challenges of COVID-19 on top of the already-precarious economics of Michigan’s child care system.

The state has tapped federal COVID-19 aid to help replenish the child care supply, noting that families — and especially women — can be pushed out of the workforce if they don’t have a safe place to send their children during the day.

“Since the pandemic, 150,000 women still haven’t come into the workforce,” said Emily Laidlaw, director of child care licensing for the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs. “A lot of that barrier is due to child care.”

Using $100 million of $1.4 billion in federal child care aid, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said she wants to help open 1,000 child care programs by 2024. The money will pay for renovations and other startup costs, and will also pay for four navigators at LARA who will help prospective providers through the process of starting a new program. These staffers will be based in four regions of the state, a recognition that the challenges of opening new programs vary between communities.

How help from the state works

Laidlaw said that 300 potential providers attended a webinar about Our Strong Start, and 400 people filled out a form to get in touch with a navigator.

Child care entrepreneurs who want help applying for a license can fill out the form at cclb.my.site.com/ourstrongstart/s/.

Keith Butler, youth pastor at Community Christian Fellowship, is working to open a new child care program to address a shortage of care in the church’s neighborhood on Detroit’s east side.

“I’m looking to fill a need, especially now as parents go back to work,” he said.

The church wants to house a child care program for 30 to 50 children ages 2 to 12. With help from licensing officials, Butler has already met zoning requirements and had fire officials walk through the proposed space to check for safety hazards. They hope to be licensed within three months.

“I can’t say I was expecting bad service necessarily, but I wasn’t expecting this,” he said. “They’ve been a godsend.”

Koby Levin is a reporter for Chalkbeat Detroit covering K-12 schools and early childhood education. Contact Koby at klevin@chalkbeat.org.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Here’s how Michigan hopes to fight shortage of child care programs