,” which graded each state on a number of supportive family policies and worker rights and protections, such as paid sick and paid family leave, pregnant worker fairness, and the domestic worker bill of rights. revealed the tremendous gaps in state care policies and a fragmented and insufficient system of care workers and families in most states.
Historically, the District of Columbia was the most advanced in terms of childcare and early learning policies. The ARPA funds supported other states to make improvements in affordability, stabilize childcare supply, and expand pre-K, and even invest additional state dollars into childcare and pre-K. However, lagging data means those changes won’t fully show up in the grades.
The persistence of historical and present-day oppressions are embedded in the lack of commonsense public policies on care and the working conditions for care workers today. That’s why progress on building a care infrastructure does not just materially help those impacted, but also helps dismantle the legacies of racism, slavery, xenophobia, sexism, ageism and ableism that have devalued care.Care policies impact everyone.
The COVID-19 pandemic and pandemic-relief investments, including the American Rescue Plan Act, not only lifted the invisibility cloak that had hidden the nationwide need to invest in care, but also supported states to innovate and take action. The historic underinvestment in care, however, means that even those measures were not enough for any state to receive an A.
With all that’s at stake for equality, we are redoubling our commitment for the next 50 years. In turn, we need your help,Laura Valle Gutierrez is a fellow at The Century Foundation, where she works on economic policy and research to promote economic, disability, racial and gender justice.
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