Despite a big pay boost the popular summer program is getting few applicants.
Every summer and winter school break, Melissa Tumbleson signs up her two daughters for PALS, a that has long provided working parents with one of the most affordable summer options in the area.
Her daughters aged 8 and 10 love 鈥 and this year in particular, Tumbleson was counting on the heavily subsidized program after she was laid off from her job at an escrow company a few months ago and only recently got a new one.
But not long after registering for the program she found out her two girls were waitlisted.
鈥淎ll of a sudden you’re like, oh shucks 鈥 I’ll probably end up having to pay $1,000 when I thought I was going to pay $200,鈥 Tumbleson said.
This year more than ever before, Maui County is struggling to find workers, threatening the program鈥檚 ability to care for the community鈥檚 keiki.
The county is in the midst of raising PALS employees’ pay to a minimum of $20 per hour and a high of around $31 per hour depending on the role. Maui’s child care workers earn on average $32,050 per year, the third lowest annual wage on island behind fast food workers and parking attendants, according to . Like other Maui employers, the government is trying to hire in a job market where the cost of living has forced families to move away.
Before the pandemic struck, the county government served roughly 1,700 children in its across 19 different sites on Maui, Molokai and Lanai.
Demand for the program dropped significantly between 2020 and 2022, as did job applications. Last year, 321 out of 468 positions went unfilled, according to , and the program served just 450 keiki at five sites on Maui and Molokai.
This summer demand for the program is back up, but the staffing levels aren鈥檛, so there may be around 150 children who won’t get a spot, according to county officials. Only two people applied to work in Lahaina with about 80 kids registered for the program, threatening its existence in West Maui.
There won’t be a program on Lanai once again because the county hasn鈥檛 received a job application there since 2019.
鈥淭he right people to work with our children is the most important factor,鈥 said Patrick McCall, Maui County Parks and Recreation director. 鈥淲e need people who truly care about kids and want to make this program successful.鈥
McCall, who was born and raised Upcountry, knows firsthand how important the care is. When he was growing up, he went to Summer Fun, the program that later evolved into PALS. The summer program brought children from across the island together to play, make art and crafts and learn to swim in public pools.
鈥淚t was a place where you made lifelong friends,鈥 McCall said. 鈥淎nd I can’t see a community where that’s not vital.鈥
McCall took the job as the county鈥檚 new parks director in January and is now acutely aware of the challenges recruiting for all sorts of positions, from public pool lifeguards to engineers in the water department. The PALS program is particularly tough to staff because it’s seasonal and requires a wide range of workers from entry level high school students to supervisors with college degrees in education.
It’s been especially hard to find qualified education workers who want to take on another job as a supervisor in the aftermath of the pandemic.
鈥淒o they need the money? Yes, they do.” McCall said. “But they also need some recovery time.鈥
Until last year, pay for PALS workers started at around $10.75 per hour. Last spring the county raised it to $15 per hour, and just recently, the often divided County Council unanimously agreed to put an additional half-million into next year’s budget to raise the minimum to $20 per hour. Many of their own children had been cared for or worked in the program, and the government is now looking into whether it’s possible to make the pay increase take effect by the time PALS starts in June.
“We are in a PALS crisis,” Council member Gabe Johnson, who championed the effort to raise pay, told his colleagues during .
Tumbleson had scrambled to track down potential scholarships for other summer programs for her daughters when she thought PALS wasn’t an option. After bracing to pay hundreds of dollars more than she’d expected, she received an email from the county Thursday morning: both of her girls got in.
“I feel thankful,” Tumbleson said, “and a lot less stressed about how to keep my girls busy and cared for during the summer.”
Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of Maui County is supported in part by a grant from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
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