Judge restores child care funds caught in shutdown
Published 6:05 pm Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Family child care providers are breathing a sigh of relief today after the judge overseeing appeals from the Minnesota government shutdown has restored funding for a child-care program that serves thousands of low-income families across the state.
Ramsey County Chief Judge Kathleen Gearin on Wednesday accepted a recommendation from special master Kathleen Blatz to reinstate child care funded through the state Basic Sliding Fee program.
The Children’s Center Director Kim Nelson said about 30 percent of her facility’s children were on that program.
She was thrilled to hear the news.
Nelson said the last two weeks at her facility have been stressful for staff and the families affected.
Before the funding was approved, she and her staff had to give the affected parents their bills and let them decide how they wanted to handle it.
She said the center had 15 children who had to be terminated because their parents were unable to pay for the entire service without the assistance.
She argued that the issue was bigger than simply not providing child care assistance. It was also a workplace issue, an economic development issue and even an education issue.
If child care assistance was cut off, parents couldn’t work, and the students likewise wouldn’t be properly prepared to enter kindergarten.
“Child care assistance does have an impact on employees,” said Freeborn County Department of Human Services Director Brian Buhmann, echoing his relief from hearing the child care assistance funding was reinstated.
He said he has seen firsthand the effects the shutdown has had because the people who have been affected by this have come into his office seeking help.
Nelson said prior to Wednesday’s decision, she also had given a layoff notice to two seasonal employees and all of her 37 other staff members were taking three-hour cuts.
She noted while she is happy to hear the news, it is still unclear about when payments will come.