Healey-Driscoll Administration Proposes Higher Reimbursement Rates for Child Care Providers
Proposal boosts payment rates for providers with a focus on infant and toddler care
LOWELL – The Healey-Driscoll Administration
today made a proposal to the Board of Early Education and Care to increase the
amount the state reimburses early education and care providers who accept child
care financial assistance, known as rates. The proposed increase would invest
$22.5 million provided in the fiscal year 2025 budget to continue the state’s progress on moving toward a rate structure
and payment levels informed by the cost of providing care, with a particular focus on
adjusting rates for infant and toddler care for center-based programs, while
also addressing increased operational costs for all providers.
“Our administration is committed to making child care more
affordable and accessible. These proposed rates build on the transformational
changes we made last year for our hardworking providers, while increasing
affordability for our low-income families,” said Governor
Maura Healey. “We’re proud that Massachusetts continues to lead the way in
setting rates that better reflect the cost of care so our providers can invest
in their educators and programming, families can continue to access care that
meets their needs, and we can reduce child care costs for families.”
“In Massachusetts, we are investing in child care so that
regardless of zip code or economic background, our youngest learners receive
the high-quality education they need to succeed in school and life. Improving
child care financial assistance – from rates, policies and regulations and IT
systems – is an essential part of this work,” said Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll. “I am excited
to see more about the impact these important proposed changes could bring to
our state, making Massachusetts a more affordable place to live, learn and
work.”
The Department of Early Education and Care (EEC) reimburses
providers of child care and out-of-school time programs that serve families
receiving child care financial assistance with a daily per child reimbursement
rate. These rates provide direct needs-based financial assistance to increase
families’ purchasing power in the market and help pay for the cost of care. The
proposed rates package includes:
- A 1-2
percent cost of living adjustment to rates for all child care financial
assistance providers to address increasing operational costs,
- Targeted
increases to infant and toddler center-based rates in specific regions,
the age groups where the rates are farthest from the cost of providing
care, and
- Raises
center-based program rates to at least 73% of the cost of care based on a
2024 updated cost analysis.
Last year, EEC, with approval from the Board, used the cost of care
for the first time to inform adjustments to rates and earlier this calendar
year was one of the first six states in the country federally approved to move
forward with an alternative methodology when setting rates for child care financial
assistance. The
transformational changes made to rates last year were based on an analysis done by the Center for Early Learning Funding Equity (CELFE) to
understand the extent to which the state’s rates covered the cost of care and
ways the agency could simplify the rate structure and address geographic
inequities.
Today’s proposal continues the administration’s progress on
using the cost of care to bring all rates closer to the true cost of care. This
past spring, EEC contracted with the American Institutes for Research (AIR) to
update, refine, and expand the cost models, which informed this year’s
proposal. Updated cost data reveal that program costs increased significantly
over the past two years. One key finding is that almost all FY24 center-based
infant and toddler rates are now below 80 percent of the 2024 cost of
care.
“Our administration believes that expanding access to more
affordable, high-quality early education and care is the first step to ensuring
every child has access to the education they deserve, regardless of their
circumstances or background,” said Secretary
of Education Patrick Tutwiler. “These proposed rate changes continue our efforts to transform
the state’s child care financial assistance system to be the system that our
students, families and early education and care providers deserve.”
“We have been focused on making our child care financial
assistance programs family
focused, accessible, dignified and equitable,” said Early Education and Care
Commissioner Amy Kershaw. “By continuing to make progress on our rates better reflect the
cost of care, with an intentional focus on equity through targeted increases
that focus on closing the biggest gaps between our rates and the cost of care,
we are enabling our providers to better recruit and retain their staff and
invest in high-quality initiatives without transferring those costs onto
families.”
“I am grateful for the Board and the Healey-Driscoll
administration’s partnership and continued efforts to promote, and support
programs to provide equitable, affordable and accessible, high-quality early
education and care across Massachusetts. Together last year, and with support
from the Legislature, we made transformational changes to how the state thinks
about and sets rates. Thank you to Commissioner Kershaw and her team for their
thoughtful, data driven rate proposal this year that builds off those changes.
The Board looks forward to this continued conversation and work ahead,” said Paul Belsito, Chair of the Board of
Early Education and Care.
The full list of proposed rates can be found online. The Board of Early Education and Care plans
to vote on this proposal this winter.
Relatedly, Boston University and
Brandeis University, in partnership with EEC, received a federal research grant to study child care
financial assistance rates and the impact of rates on family access to care and
program participation in the child care financial assistance system. As part of
this work, they conducted focus groups last spring with early education and
care programs on the impact of the rate changes over the past two years. Many
participating programs were appreciative of the new higher rates, especially
for those whose reimbursement rates are now much closer to their private pay
prices. Programs indicated that they used the increases for operational
expenses, necessary program improvements or increased staffing. While a step in
the right direction, some providers did note the increases were not yet close
enough to the true price of providing care. Here is a sampling of the feedback received:
“Last year’s [reimbursement rate increase], for us, was
really helpful. To the point that the finance director for our agency said to
me, ‘Is this right?’. You know this is way more than what we’ve experienced.”
(Participating Center)
“For us, [the reimbursement rates] are so much better.
You know, which is great. I think for toddler or preschoolers we’re at like […]
73% or 72% of […] what our private pays. And with infants and toddlers, it’s in
the 90s, which is great.” (Participating Center)
“We have actually increased our staffing. You know, we
initially had [increased our staffing] during COVID for health and safety […]
reasons. And we’ve kept that, which I guess, indirectly, might enable us to be
more effective with high needs children.” (Participating Center)
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