Hiring crisis in child care: 'We're stuck in a market that's broken' - New England Public Media

By Nancy Eve Cohen

In western Massachusetts, the cost and availability of child care can be a major barrier to employment for some parents. During the pandemic, it has become an even bigger problem, in part because day care providers themselves are having a harder time recruiting employees.

Standing in a circle, preschoolers at the Mt Carmel Early Education and Care Center in Chicopee are flapping a multi-colored round cloth they call a parachute, and running under it.

Teachers Mariah Baez and Tiannah Youmans are helping them learn to play together.

"What else we can do with the parachute?" Youmans asked the children.

"Twirl around," one child answered.

"We can twirl around?" Youmans replied. "OK! Look, everyone grab a side."

Sometimes the lessons come when playing together isn’t going as well.

"You’re on his foot, my love," Baez said to a preschooler on a tricycle. "Give him a minute. He’s trying to fix it." 

Both Baez and Youmans said they love their work. But, overall, child care providers said they’re having trouble hiring staff.

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Child care is costly everywhere. But in Massachusetts, it’s ‘particularly bad.’ Here’s why - Boston Globe

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It’s time we lean in together to solve the child care crisis - Boston Business Journal