Survey of Kansas child care facilities points to lingering challenges of COVID-19

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A new survey of Kansas child-care facilities reveals lingering financial and personnel challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic that advocates say are pushing the system to the brink.

TOPEKA — A new Kansas child care survey highlights how the COVID-19 pandemic continues to stretch the thinning network of providers by exacerbating staff shortages, deepening financial challenges, and amplifying occupational stress and burnout.

Child Care Aware of Kansas and the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund, which both endorse the idea of investing public dollars in the system caring for children, partnered to gather input from providers across the state.

The survey of day care homes, group day care homes and day care centers — 29% of the state’s total — indicated facility operators were committed to extra cleaning, handwashing and temperature checks. More significant public health precautions, including vaccinations, the wearing of masks and social distancing, are less prevalent, the report said.

Less than half of providers were making certain that employees were vaccinated, while 61% were requiring staff to be tested after exposure to the virus. Only 4% of the state’s child care providers were requiring regular COVID-19 testing as a precaution against spread of the deadly virus.

In the survey, four of 10 respondents said mandates by government would give them greater leverage to implement precautions against the coronavirus.

Forces tied to COVID-19 were leading operators of child care centers or home-based programs to consider closing, the survey said.

“Sustaining quality child care, particularly in rural communities, was a challenge before the pandemic,” said David Jordan, president and chief executive officer of the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund. “The pandemic is pushing staff, centers’ viability and the system to the brink.”

He said the pandemic made it more difficult to recruit workers and to operate centers. A consequence is that parents have greater obstacles to acquiring quality care, he said.

“We need to ensure centers have the resources to implement proven public health practices such as masking and vaccinations,” Jordan said.

Gov. Laura Kelly enacted social distancing, mass gathering and masking mandates early in the pandemic that began in March 2020, but much of that responsibility has been transferred to city and county officials.

Kansas has no vaccination mandate, but the administration of President Joe Biden has directed that federal government employees and workers at some businesses get a vaccine or be regularly tested. The Democratic president’s decision has been criticized by Republican lawmakers at the federal and state levels.

In Kansas, a special committee of the Kansas Legislature was formed by Republican leaders in the House and Senate to explore government actions related to masking and vaccinations.

Kelly Davydov, executive director of Child Care Aware of Kansas, said that only 3% of the 105 counties in Kansas met child-care demand in 2020 before the pandemic.

“Child care is essential to our economy and to early childhood development. We need to be adding providers, not seeing them close their homes or centers,” Davydov said.

Survey participants said the potential of enduring the pandemic would be elevated with financial support tied to specific public-health mandates, including masking, testing and vaccinations. The stability of child care providers in Kansas would be enhanced if workers in the field were paid better salaries, the survey said.

• Tim Carpenter reports for Kansas Reflector.

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