Born and raised on Oahu, Catherine Toth Fox is an editor, writer, children鈥檚 book author, blogger and former journalism instructor. She is currently the editor at large for Hawaii Magazine and lives in Honolulu with her husband, son and two dogs. You can follow her on Instagram @catherinetothfox. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.
We need to fix the leaking bucket of child care workers before we talk more about the teacher pipeline.
A friend of mine worked at a Honolulu preschool for a few years and loved it 鈥 until she needed a second job to make ends meet. She ditched her dreams of running her own early childhood education center and went into real estate.
This scenario isn鈥檛 uncommon, especially in Hawaii where preschool teachers, on average, make between $13 and $17 an hour 鈥 about half the state鈥檚 living wage. I recently saw a job posting at a Honolulu preschool where the salary started at $17 an hour, or $35,360 a year.
, roofers, funeral attendants and farm workers earn more.
The wages can be even lower for those working at infant and toddler centers (for children 3 years and under). And now, not surprisingly, Hawaii is suffering from an exodus of child care workers. According to the , from 2018 to 2020, Hawaii lost 20% of its child care workforce.
Then the pandemic hit.
Even more professionals in the early child care and education sector 鈥 both in Hawaii and across the country 鈥 left their jobs. Many haven鈥檛 returned, forcing preschools and other child care centers to operate at a reduced capacity because of staffing shortages.
Already, there鈥檚 not enough regulated capacity to fulfill Hawaii鈥檚 child care needs. According to the , there鈥檚 only enough regulated capacity for 10% of Hawaii鈥檚 kids under 3 years old.
While to the construction, expansion or renovation of pre-kindergarten facilities across the state, it doesn’t solve the problem of retaining qualified child care workers.
鈥淲e have a ton of attention on expansion, which is great, but what I鈥檓 trying to get folks to realize is that there鈥檚 lots of talk about the pipeline,鈥 says Keopu Reelitz, director of Early Learning and Health Policy at the .
“It鈥檚 great to have a solid pipeline, but what use is it if it鈥檚 pouring into a leaking bucket? We need to fix that leaking bucket.鈥
The mother of three spent most of Wednesday at the Hawaii State Capitol, , her 1-year-old son in tow. The bill would help with this problem, boosting pay for child care workers in infant and toddler centers 鈥 raising hourly pay by $3 across the board 鈥 and hopefully improve retention in the field.
In order for it to work, the Hawaii Department of Human Services would need to pilot a program to provide wage supplements to subsidies to early childhood care and education professionals in infant and toddler centers, like Keiki o Ka Aina and the infant rooms of Seagull Schools.
It would be a two-year program 鈥 costing $4 million per year 鈥 that, hopefully, would eventually expand to include preschools too.
The bill is scheduled to be heard Monday.
A similar law was passed in Washington, D.C., last spring. The taxes D.C.鈥檚 highest earners and sends annual bonus payments of up to $14,000 to teachers of children between 0 and 5 years in preschools and daycares.
; daycare owners say they鈥檙e losing staff to fast food restaurants and other retailers that pay better with less responsibility.
In testimony supporting HB 547, Reelitz noted that early childhood care and education professionals help infants and toddlers build skills “that lay the foundation for lifelong education鈥揵uilding foundations in social-emotional skills, math, motor skills and literacy.”
“In addition to helping develop the next generations of curious and engaged citizens, infant and toddler child care professionals enable parents, caregivers and other family members to go to work,” she says. “They are the workforce behind so many other workforces.”
Isn鈥檛 that well worth $13 an hour?
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Born and raised on Oahu, Catherine Toth Fox is an editor, writer, children鈥檚 book author, blogger and former journalism instructor. She is currently the editor at large for Hawaii Magazine and lives in Honolulu with her husband, son and two dogs. You can follow her on Instagram @catherinetothfox. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.
Unfortunately, the Socioeconomic class that heavily depend on childcare services are majority young couples/single parents that are just beginning careers or working multiple jobs to survive!Thus, this group cannot afford to pay more to adequately compensate better wages for these childcare workers.Maybe "A Local Childcare Union?"
PSpects·
1 year ago
Anyone working with our school children needs more than minimum!
Richard·
1 year ago
Why work changing diapers when you can make more flipping burgers at McDonalds?
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