Free child care from higher taxes? These cities subsidize daycare

world2024-05-22 09:46:02222

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Last summer, Derrika Richard felt stuck. She didn’t have enough money to afford child care for her three youngest children, ages 1, 2 and 3. Yet the demands of caring for them on a daily basis made it impossible for Richard, a hairstylist, to work. One child care assistance program rejected her because she wasn’t working enough. It felt like an unsolvable quandary: Without care, she couldn’t work. And without work, she couldn’t afford care.

But Richard’s life changed in the fall, when, thanks to a new city-funded program for low-income families called City Seats, she enrolled the three children at Clara’s Little Lambs, a child care center in the Westbank neighborhood of New Orleans. For the first time, she’s earning enough to pay her bills and afford online classes.

“It actually paved the way for me to go to school,” Richard said one morning this spring, after walking the three children to their classrooms. City Seats, she said, “changed my life.”

Address of this article:http://bhutan.fightbigfood.org/content-88f199725.html

Popular

NASCAR star Kyle Larson is embracing his Indianapolis 500 debut, right down to milking a cow

As King Charles' slimmed

Afternoon tea makes a comeback thanks to the snap

Channing Tatum and Jenna Dewan seeking to have one another testify at upcoming divorce hearing

Police break up pro

Brooke Burke, 52, poses with her mini

America's best fast food restaurants ranked

Michael Sheen comically reveals how he broke his toe at a gym in LA

LINKS