Top Takeaways is a series of recaps from important conversations, town halls, webinars and virtual events about early learning.
The National League of Cities (NLC) held its last month. While child care came up at many of the sessions, it occupied center stage at two of them. Johnny DuPree, former mayor of Hattiesburg, Mississippi, moderated Small but Mighty 鈥 Children and Families Thriving in Small Cities, with these panelists:
- Tracy Mims, Mayor of Webb, Mississippi
- Susan Broussard, chief of staff, Mayor鈥檚 office, Alexandria, Louisiana
- Sally Wilson, Mayor, Osceola, Arkansas
And Taking Care of Business: Child Care and Getting Back to Work featured:
- Victoria Farrar-Myers, Deputy Mayor Pro Tempore, Arlington, Texas
- Julia Barfield, senior manager of policy & programs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation
- Chokwe Antar Lumumba, Mayor of Jackson, Mississippi
- William Rawls, Mayor of Brownsville, Tennessee
Here are five takeaways from the conversations:
1. Child care is a workforce issue. Even before the pandemic, Barfield said, when employers came together to talk about workforce issues, 鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 have a conversation without child care coming up.鈥 She noted that child care is a $47.2 billion industry with a 1.5 million strong workforce鈥攂igger than the airlines. Today, with an increasing number of parents defecting from the workforce for lack of accessible and affordable child care, the need for relief is greater than ever, and so is the potential return on investment. Mayor Rawls, the first Black mayor of his city, comes from a family of funeral home owners, so he knows the challenges that small businesses face. 鈥淢ain Street needs to be part of the conversation,鈥 he said.
2. Child care affects nearly every facet of community life. Beyond workforce issues, inadequate child care hampers everything from health care to higher education, with disastrous consequences for today鈥檚 families and tomorrow鈥檚 citizens. The situation is especially dire in so-called child-care deserts where poverty and education gaps already plague families. Championing an early education focus in her small city, Broussard quoted a favorite saying of her boss, Mayor Jeff Hall: 鈥淭here鈥檚 no barrier between a child who can鈥檛 read and the penitentiary in Angola.鈥
She also stressed the importance of collecting data before making decisions. 鈥淭he issue wasn鈥檛 what we thought it was at first,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 need more books in the library. We needed volunteers to read them.鈥
3. The economy is a human issue. COVID is hitting communities of color harder, and experts fear the recovery will reach them last. 鈥淓verything got derailed by the pandemic,鈥 Wilson recalled. 鈥淲hatever our priorities were before, all of a sudden we had to shift gears to food insecurity.
Mayor Lumumba鈥攁 Detroit native鈥攕poke of the 鈥渄ignity economy,鈥 which goes beyond gross domestic product and other traditional indicators. 鈥淭here is dignity,鈥 he asserted, 鈥渋n being able to pay your bills.鈥
In terms of possible solutions for his small Delta city, Mayor Lumumba mentioned Universal Basic Income, a policy championed by, among others, 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang.
4. Breaking down silos means changing mindsets. Wilson described a weekly phone call with pastors as a way of reaching communities often left out of the political conversation. 鈥淲hen you work together,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou can generate more funds.鈥
Farrar-Myers organized a child care summit in Arlington. 鈥淧olitical leaders have the power to be conveners,鈥 she said, 鈥渘ot necessarily to come up with all the solutions.鈥
Mayor Rawls also emphasized the advantages of creating synergies between groups that don鈥檛 usually collaborate. Mayor Mims noted that convening disparate groups 鈥渆ngenders trust and respect.鈥
Hospitals and universities can be anchors for these conversations. Partnerships with retirement communities and other multigenerational interactions may be part of the solution in some communities.
5. Declines in tax revenue mean trouble ahead. 鈥淒on鈥檛 think that when the pandemic is over, everything will be okay,鈥 warned Mayor Lumumba. There are hard choices ahead, he said, citing his own adamant refusal to cut his city鈥檚 early childhood development budget. Mayor Mims said there would always be potholes, garbage collection and other day-to-day issues, but it鈥檚 important never to stop asking what really moves the needle.
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