A New Law Is Making It Even Harder To Find Day Care in D.C.
D.C.'s new degree requirements could lead to job losses, increased operating costs, and higher tuition.
HD DownloadAverage toddler day care costs in Washington, D.C., exceed $24,000 a year, outstripping expenses in cities like New York and San Francisco. Despite the steep prices, parents such as Megan McCune and Tom Shonosky, who live in a suburban D.C. neighborhood with their children John and Lizzy, believe day care is still worth it.
"They're doing these amazing activities with kids. John's last teacher was planning just all these really stimulating, exciting experiences," McCune says. "That's just not something that we can feasibly do and also have full-time jobs."
But day care might soon become a luxury the couple can no longer afford. In 2016, a regulation was passed mandating that day care workers obtain a college degree. The city's logic is straightforward: If D.C.'s day care staff had college degrees, they could do a better job helping disadvantaged kids climb out of poverty.
"The developmental opportunities and those early opportunities that they have really set the foundation for their potential success long term," explained local education official Elizabeth Groginsky, a proponent of the regulation. After a delay, the rule was finally implemented in December 2023.
Yet contrary to its intended benefits, this regulation could lead to job losses among day care workers, increased operating costs for day cares, and higher tuition for parents.
Ami Bawa, lead teacher and assistant director at a nursery school in northwest D.C., exemplifies the unintended consequences of the regulation. Although she has been working in the field for over 20 years, Bawa may now be forced out of her job. "Even though I have a lot of experiential learning, I don't meet what is now the current standard," she explains.
As a veteran teacher, Bawa is technically eligible to apply for a waiver to continue working, but she's been waiting for five months for a response from the city. "All of these roadblocks make it harder. We're going to lose a lot of really good teachers," Bawa says.
Proponents argue that the regulation will earn teachers more respect and higher salaries. But Bawa disagrees: "A profession like teaching specifically has to be one where you really care for and love what you're doing. What your education credential is doesn't equate to loving and being committed to the field."
The regulation "makes us feel like we're interchangeable, like anybody could do this job, when that really is not the case."
In addition, the college requirement complicates the process for day cares to find qualified staff. McCune explains, "It's going to be the smaller day cares, the more affordable day cares that are going to suffer because they're not going to be able to attract talent or retain it, and they're not going to be able to put their prices to the level that they need to be to cover that talent, because people like us aren't going to be able to pay it."
In 2018, the libertarian-leaning public-interest law firm the Institute for Justice sued the D.C. government to overturn the education requirements, claiming it interferes with the right to earn a living. But the courts ruled in favor of the city on the grounds that the requirement was reasonable.
Yet the effectiveness of college requirements remains a subject of debate. As Robert Pianta, a professor of early childhood education at the University of Virginia, points out, "The evidence for a two-year degree or a four-year degree is not strong."
There are over 3,000 early childhood degree programs across the United States, and they vary significantly in terms of what they teach and focus on. "With all that variation under there, it's no surprise to anyone that the degree itself doesn't matter," Pianta says.
Many day care teachers eager to retain their jobs have enrolled part-time at institutions such as Trinity Washington University, a small college in the district. To earn the degree required to be an assistant teacher at a D.C. day care, students at Trinity can take classes like American history and music appreciation but aren't required to take courses in early education.
Councilmember Christina Henderson supports the idea that day care workers study subjects unrelated to early education, emphasizing the importance of "critical thinking and learning." In contrast, McCune remarks, "Let's just back up a little and remember that these are babies….I think the needs of children at that stage, they're pretty primal."
Nicole Page, a local preschool director, believes that "it does not only take education, it takes experience" to work at a day care. "That's what we will lose if we are not able to retain our staff, is the wealth of knowledge that they have by hands-on experience."
Her preschool is at risk of losing valuable staff, with at least 11 teachers failing to meet the new qualifications. One teacher even has a Ph.D. in family and children studies and is an adjunct professor teaching a policy and advocacy course for early childhood education at a local university, but she's no longer qualified to teach at a day care because her degree isn't in early childhood education.
"If we are not able to retain the staff that we have, we may end up having to close some of our classrooms," Page explains.
This regulation, intended to improve child care quality, may instead harm those it aims to assist. "I just think in D.C., there's a lot of bureaucracy," says Shonosky. "This is just another case where bureaucracy is going to make our lives worse."
Music Credits: "Pizzi Waltz" by Kadir Demir, via Artlist; "Against the Clock" by Rhythm Scott, via Artlist; "The Morning Lights" by Francesco DAndrea. via Artlist; "Sophisticated Nostalgia" by Nobou, via Artlist; "Deep Dive" by Ty Simon, via Artlist; "The Isle" by Rhythm Scott via Artlist; "Grey Shadow" by ANBR, via Artlist; "Currents" by Ardie Son, via Artlist;
Photo Credits: Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call/Newscom
- Audio Production: Ian Keyser
- Graphics: Adani Samat
- Writer: Katarina Hall
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1. Babysitters do NOT need a college degree.
2. Why do women have children they do not want to raise?
What’s next? Requiring barely legal teens to have college degrees to portray babysitters in adult films?
No. Next is forcing these daycare employees to join a Teacher's Union. Anytime something like this is done, look for the nose of the Union camel sticking under the tent.
They got knocked up accidentally and their Christian families used guilt to keep them from getting an abortion. The kid is now interfering with their "have it all" feminist dream so she puts the kid in storage. The kid winds up seeking adult attention and some school teacher fills that role and convinces them of their proper "gender" from all the options they have and poisons the kid against their parents which isn't too hard since the kid knows their day care people better than their parents. Then everyone complains about how the groomers are doing evil shit to kids ignoring that the whole cycle could have been avoided before it even started.
How are working women putting their children in daycare 'knocked up accidentally?' The women who have their kids in daycare are college educated professionals who make enough money for daycare and contribute much to society and do not take handouts.
If you aren't able to be a stay at home mother you must not want to raise your kids?
Wow. Just wow.
Not sure about daycares in DC, but there is a senior care facility located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Funny thing is, that Lynn Cheney ran a free daycare in the building that her husband worked in, for children of WH and EOB staffers. Unfortunately, her PhD wouldn’t have counted, being in something like history.
Dr. Jill Biden Person Care and Diaper Changing Service
- decades of experience changing soiled drawers
"A New Law Is Making It Even Harder To Find Day Care in D.C."
Oh, that's just great.
Now who is going to babysit all the democrats and republicans there?
Here is a useful education requirement for teaching at the pre-school and elementary levels. Having a degree in education should be a disqualifying credential and no degree should be required.
SOME teachers go for a elementary education degree because they are eager to work with kids and teach. Too many go for that degree because it is an easy degree and "you can't get fired".
If you willingly live in DC with a child, your competence as a parent is ALREADY deeply in question.
You're not wrong.
"The city's logic is straightforward: If D.C.'s day care staff had college degrees, they could do a better job helping disadvantaged kids climb out of poverty. "
Huh? I fail to see the logic.
How do disadvantaged parents afford $24k a year?
Now there's a Catch-22. The disadvantaged can afford day care staff that don't have a college degree but they don't do a good job helping disadvantaged kids climb out of poverty. Day care staff that have a college degree do a better job helping disadvantaged kids climb out of poverty but the disadvantaged can't afford them.
It's the same logic Bush Jr used with houses. Statistics show people who own their homes are better off financially than those that don't. So, if everyone owns a house everyone will be financially well off.
In this case it's likely some bullshit about children of people with advanced degrees are better off than kids whose parents don't have degrees. Since they've done all they can to try and get everyone an advanced degree and keep failing they figure it's the exposure to people with advance degrees. So if the daycare people they spend more time with than the parents have advanced degrees they get the same effect.
I've heard it called the Basketball Fallicy. Basketball players are all real tall so if you want to be tall, play basketball. Obviously that won't work and this scheme won't work either.
So yeah, no logic to it. Really, no matter how you look at it. It's probably just this love for credentialism and socio-economic ignorance. Or wonder if it's not just Big Daycare trying to crowd out the little guy? Or the The Daycare Industrial Complex (DIC for short).
Maybe there is growing demand for baristas in the childcare industry.
I live in South Dakota and we only used a day care place for the first year we moved here. After that he went to a freinds home after school until CPS wouldn't investigate us for having him come home by himself.
We don't have a Big Day Care out here. I don't know about DC. Is that a thing out east?
I think the reason that takes political stupidity into consideration is usually best. I don't expect government to be able to do much conspiring, they usually are doing stupid shit out where everyone can see it. So unless Big Daycare is a thing I go with the Basketball Fallicy.
"Wet roads cause rain."
Or my favorite:
"Increased sales of ice cream lead to more shark attacks."
Yup. There are probably as many as there have been stupid politicians since man first decided that farming looked like a good idea.
More make-work for the racket that is college. If the aforementioned Ph.D. doesn't enter the undergrad degree program at the aforementioned small college to keep her job, there'll be others.
With the prevalence of pedophiles in DC I wouldn’t let anyone there watch my kids.
Know when it is nap time at Brandon Daycare?
When the big hand is on the little hand.
every regulation is a thief
It's the same logic in the K12 system. A PhD in History is not allowed to teach High School. The Ed schools teach abstract theory poorly and do little to actually prepare teachers for the real world environment. The truth is that any intelligent person with content knowledge can teach. Most of the tricks to teaching well are learned on the job. This is blasphemy in the schools of ed but it's the truth. It's a racket designed to give teachers leverage when negotiating cointracts. They cut off supply and then get the media to put out stories about teacher shortages. It's bunk of course. The shortages are in special ed. If a school is having a hard time finding teachers it is because they allow students to run wild and make teaching miserable.
"Those who can't do, teach. And those who can't teach, teach gym."
--School of Rock
Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach. Those who can't teach, teach gym.
Can't daycares just provide babysitting services and bypass the new rule? It's not like children need a diploma from these institutions.
Having said that, regulations suck, especially when they separate willing buyers from willing providers.