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President-elect Trump is now a convicted felon; At least 10 dead and whole neighborhoods destroyed in LA firestorms; Local concerns rise over Ohio's hydrogen project; New MI legislator rings in the new year with the pending new law; Ohio River Basin would get federal protection under the new legislation.

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House lawmakers take aim at the International Criminal Court, former President Jimmy Carter is laid to rest in his hometown of Plains, Georgia, and another fight looms over the Affordable Care Act.

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"Drill, baby, drill" is a tough sell for oil and gas companies in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, rising sea levels create struggles for Washington's coastal communities, and more folks than ever are taking advantage of America's great outdoors.

Iowa adds hundreds of higher-wage child care providers

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Monday, December 2, 2024   

A new report says Iowa has created more than 200 new child-care providers in the state, which is among the nation's leaders in working parents who need it.

The jobs were created with pandemic relief funds, and bolstered by money from local businesses.

Iowa set aside $3 million in COVID relief aid to create the Child Care Solutions Fund, which established more providers and is making money available to pay them.

Businesses in the seven Iowa communities that took part in the program kicked in another $1.4 million, to increase the notoriously low wages and improve health benefits.

A Program Manager at Common Good Iowa, Sheila Hansen, said the investments will make a big difference on the ground.

"It created around 275 child-care slots and about 105 child-care providers," said Hansen. "And then it impacted around 1,200 child-care personnel."

The Iowa Women's Foundation and the Common Sense Institute of Iowa released the report.

The state recently launched a website that shows parents in real-time who has child-care openings, so they can see what's available when they need it.

While the pilot program was created with pandemic relief money, the report says expanding it statewide would cost Iowa about $28 million a year.

Hansen said she thinks it would be a wise investment, in a state that desperately needs more child-care services.

"Iowa leads the nation with both available parents in the workforce," said Hansen. "The need for child care is really immense. And if they're not in the workforce and they want to be, you know, and they struggle to find child care, then they're not really contributing."

The report estimates if every mother with kids had access to child care and wanted to work, at least 150,000 more women would join the Iowa labor force.




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