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Three US Marshal task force officers killed in NC shootout; MA municipalities aim to lower the voting age for local elections; breaking barriers for health equity with nutritional strategies; "Product of USA" label for meat items could carry more weight under the new rule.

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Big Pharma uses red meat rhetoric in a fight over drug costs. A school shooting mother opposes guns for teachers. Campus protests against the Gaza war continue, and activists decry the killing of reporters there.

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More rural working-age people are dying young compared to their urban counterparts, the internet was a lifesaver for rural students during the pandemic but the connection has been broken for many, and conservationists believe a new rule governing public lands will protect them for future generations.

Feds Neglect Child-Care Update for 16 Years

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Monday, May 7, 2012   

GUILFORD, Conn. - Congress has gone 16 years without reauthorizing the law that helps fund local child-care programs, and that's far too long, say leaders in the field in Connectucut and Washington. The bill is called The Child Care and Development Block Grant, and in addition to the funding it allocates to states, it sets standards for training, health and safety, including background checks for child-care workers.

It troubles child-care advocate Grace Reef, chief of policy and evaluation, Child Care Aware of America, that the measure hasn't been reauthorized since 1996.

"In general, every five years, or six years, Congress is reauthorizing, which means taking another look at what they did. Is it working as intended, are there things we need to address, or things we've learned?"

Reef's group says Connecticut is among the states that require background checks for child-care workers, and they are hoping that Congress tightens up the rules to ensure the quality of those checks from state to state.

At the Guilford Center for Children, director Pamela Orton hopes that as part of the process Congress will make training dollars available to help child-care workers meet the tougher standards and grow in their field of work.

"To be more than a teacher aide, for instance, they might want to be a teacher, then they have to have more education, but they can't really afford to go out and get their own education. It would be helpful to have those training dollars."

Grace Reef says increased funding would be great, but at the very least she believes Congress should get to work revising the law's health, safety and training provisions.

"You know, let's push politics aside. Child care should be a bipartisan issue. And how can we reach agreement on maybe some core elements that would be low-cost or even no-cost and would improve the quality of care?"

Nationwide, nearly 11 million children under age five are in some type of child-care setting every week.


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