Opinion editor’s note: Strib Voices publishes a mix of material from 11 contributing columnists, along with other commentary online and in print each day. To contribute, click here.
•••
In the lobbies and lounges of our state’s second-tier country clubs, you’ll find people who built generational wealth running assisted living facilities. But you won’t find a child care tycoon.
Nobody gets rich on day care, for reasons parents well understand: Children are deeply unprofitable. They’re not team players and seem wholly unconcerned with PTO policies at Mom or Dad’s workplace. Despite this, children are, if Whitney Houston is to be believed, “our future.” Worst of all, we love them so very much.
Medicare and Medicaid don’t fund child care like they do senior care, nor do children or their parents have a life’s savings to dump into the enterprise. County and state funds help low-income families, but not nearly to the same degree they do seniors. That’s why senior care facilities are often part of massive corporate networks with names like “Esperanto” while child care facilities are usually run by one highly caffeinated individual.
That means if working parents want to pay their bills in an increasingly expensive world, they must pay for their own child care. And they’ll pay dearly. According to Child Care Aware of Minnesota, families pay anywhere from $152 per week to $388 per week, depending on the age of the child and type of facility, with higher rates in the Twin Cities metro area. That means up to $21,000 per year in Minnesota, one of the highest rates in the country. For these prices, parents might rightly assume that someone’s getting rich.
But it’s certainly not the employees. A preschool teacher in Minnesota earns an average of $15.85 an hour, according to the Early Childhood Workforce Index. A child care worker makes just $11.48. My teenage sons made more during their summer jobs last year. Child care employment also comes with training requirements that workers typically pay for themselves.
Child care centers aren’t making big profits, either. Whether private, nonprofit or public, most facilities make just enough to get by, which is why you don’t see Amazon or Walmart rushing to compete with them.