"NYC's Child Care Crisis: 16,000 Families Left Waiting as Voucher Program Reaches Breaking Point"
A growing waitlist of nearly 16,000 New York City kids and their families is on the verge of collapse as the city struggles to provide affordable child care vouchers. Parents are being forced to make drastic lifestyle changes, cutting back work hours or delaying returns to the workforce, just to keep up with mounting childcare costs.
The state's Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP) has become a victim of its own success, with more families signing up than the city and state budgeted for. With over 100,000 children currently enrolled in the program, parents who qualify based on income can receive up to $15 per week in subsidies. However, the demand far exceeds available funding, leaving many families waiting months or even years for assistance.
Despite Governor Kathy Hochul's promise of an additional $1.2 billion for vouchers in her proposed spending plan, advocates warn that it may not be enough to clear the waitlist. To give parents a sense of urgency, advocates are calling on Mayor Zohran Mamdani to increase city funding and prioritize lower-income families.
"This is a way to help families right away as you're trying to scale up," said Pete Nabozny, policy director for The Children's Agenda. "But without prioritizing the lowest income families, we'll never get to universal child care."
The current system creates an uneven playing field, where newly eligible families who earn higher incomes are being waitlisted behind those already receiving cash assistance. This means that families with a new baby on the way are often forced to put their older child's care on hold.
"It's a sad, unfortunate reality for many people," said Nathalie Dilone, whose husband had to cut back work hours to pick up her two kids from school due to unaffordable childcare costs. "You're trying to keep yourself above water, and you think you're doing the right thing by going to school and getting that job... but you don't qualify and still need help."
Providers are also feeling the pinch, with many struggling to pay bills without parents who can afford care. Shannan Ramsay, owner of Step With Purpose daycare in East New York, said that when the voucher program opened its waitlist, "the phone actually stopped ringing." Her program is licensed for 16 children but currently has only nine enrolled.
As the city scrambles to provide more child care options, advocates are pushing for a comprehensive solution that prioritizes lower-income families and ensures universal access to affordable childcare.
A growing waitlist of nearly 16,000 New York City kids and their families is on the verge of collapse as the city struggles to provide affordable child care vouchers. Parents are being forced to make drastic lifestyle changes, cutting back work hours or delaying returns to the workforce, just to keep up with mounting childcare costs.
The state's Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP) has become a victim of its own success, with more families signing up than the city and state budgeted for. With over 100,000 children currently enrolled in the program, parents who qualify based on income can receive up to $15 per week in subsidies. However, the demand far exceeds available funding, leaving many families waiting months or even years for assistance.
Despite Governor Kathy Hochul's promise of an additional $1.2 billion for vouchers in her proposed spending plan, advocates warn that it may not be enough to clear the waitlist. To give parents a sense of urgency, advocates are calling on Mayor Zohran Mamdani to increase city funding and prioritize lower-income families.
"This is a way to help families right away as you're trying to scale up," said Pete Nabozny, policy director for The Children's Agenda. "But without prioritizing the lowest income families, we'll never get to universal child care."
The current system creates an uneven playing field, where newly eligible families who earn higher incomes are being waitlisted behind those already receiving cash assistance. This means that families with a new baby on the way are often forced to put their older child's care on hold.
"It's a sad, unfortunate reality for many people," said Nathalie Dilone, whose husband had to cut back work hours to pick up her two kids from school due to unaffordable childcare costs. "You're trying to keep yourself above water, and you think you're doing the right thing by going to school and getting that job... but you don't qualify and still need help."
Providers are also feeling the pinch, with many struggling to pay bills without parents who can afford care. Shannan Ramsay, owner of Step With Purpose daycare in East New York, said that when the voucher program opened its waitlist, "the phone actually stopped ringing." Her program is licensed for 16 children but currently has only nine enrolled.
As the city scrambles to provide more child care options, advocates are pushing for a comprehensive solution that prioritizes lower-income families and ensures universal access to affordable childcare.