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In full transparency, the following is a press release from Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark’s office to SOURCE media. Clark is the congresswoman for this area. She is a Democrat. (Petroni Media Company file photo)

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WASHINGTON DC – Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark (MA-5) led a letter to President Joe Biden urging his Administration to include child care providers in their plan to increase access to COVID-19 testing and N95 and KN-95 masks across the country.

The letter was co-led by Representatives Suzanne Bonamici (OR-1), Kim Schrier, M.D. (WA-8), Abigail Spanberger (VA-7), and Joaquin Castro (TX-20) and signed by an additional 48 Members of Congress. 

“It is clear that child care is essential infrastructure that is fundamental to families, the economy, and our recovery from this pandemic. However, reports suggest that child care disruptions are once again on the rise as the Omicron variant spreads and providers are forced to limit their capacity or close due to illness or staffing issues,” wrote the lawmakers. 

“To help keep child care providers operating and young children safe, we must ensure that providers have access to COVID-19 tests and the recommended N95 and KN-95 masks. Now is the time for a comprehensive strategy to ensure that all child care providers have the resources and guidance they need to safely remain open and provide care. Our economic recovery depends on a reliable and functioning child care system that supports providers, helps children thrive, and enables parents, and especially moms, to return to work.”

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Last year, Clark helped secure $40 billion in child care relief funding in the American Rescue Plan to keep child care and Head Start programs open, helping child care providers to stay afloat, get parents to get back to work, and ensure that businesses can still thrive during the pandemic. 

Full text of the letter is below.

Dear President Biden:

We write to urge inclusion of child care providers in your Administration’s plans to increase access to COVID-19 testing and N95 masks across the country. We appreciate the actions by your Administration to increase access to COVID-19 testing in K-12 schools by 10 million per month as well as your efforts to distribute tests and masks to individual Americans. However, we remain concerned about the significant challenges child care providers are facing as the Omicron variant spreads and the impact this is having on families.

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It is clear that child care is essential infrastructure that is fundamental to families, the economy, and our recovery from this pandemic. However, reports suggest that child care disruptions are once again on the rise as the Omicron variant spreads and providers are forced to limit their capacity or close due to illness or staffing issues.

This is leaving millions of parents and caregivers in limbo as they face uncertainty on whether they will have access to child care on any given day. These challenges are compounded by the fact that children under five are not yet eligible for vaccines, and data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that COVID-19 hospitalization rates among children in this age group have soared in recent weeks.

To help keep child care providers operating and young children safe, we must ensure that providers have access to COVID-19 tests and the recommended N95 and KN95 masks. Some states have launched their own initiatives to distribute free COVID-19 tests and other supplies to child care providers, and these models have proven effective for providers in detecting positive cases early and avoiding internal spread.

However, it is still hard to access COVID-19 tests in many places, and child providers, many of whom are already operating on the margins, have reported spending anywhere from $1,000 to $10,000 on rapid and at-home tests for themselves and the families in their care

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Now is the time for a comprehensive strategy to ensure that all child care providers have the resources and guidance they need to safely remain open and provide care. Our economic recovery depends on a reliable and functioning child care system that supports providers, helps children thrive, and enables parents, and especially moms, to return to work.

Thank you for your consideration of this matter and we look forward to working with you to support children and families.

By editor

Susan Petroni is the former editor for SOURCE. She is the founder of the former news site, which as of May 1, 2023, is now a self-publishing community bulletin board. The website no longer has a journalist but a webmaster.