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2024 Session

Budget Amendments - HB30 (Member Request)

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Chief Patron: Bennett-Parker
Child Care Subsidy Program: Maintain Early Child Care and Education Funding

Item 117 #10h

Item 117 #10h

First Year - FY2025 Second Year - FY2026
Education
Department of Education, Central Office Operations FY2025 $106,750,000 FY2026 $87,200,000 GF

Language
Page 121, line 46, strike "$515,129,653" and insert "$621,879,653".
Page 121, line 46, strike "$539,690,133" and insert "$626,890,133".

Page 124, line 54, strike "$172,258,588" and insert "$279,008,588".

Page 124, line 56, strike "$237,815,584" and insert "$325,015,584".

Page 125, after line 44, insert:

"S. Notwithstanding 8VAC-20-790, the Department of Education shall increase participation in the Child Care Subsidy Program among families and providers by: 1) making child care assistance available to parents or guardians who are searching for work; 2) providing categorical eligibility for families with young children participating in Medicaid and WIC; 3) issuing payments to Child Care Subsidy Program vendors for authorized enrollment, subject to the attendance threshold established by the Department of Education; 4) issuing payments to providers for up to 15 days of planned closure for all vendors in the Child Care Subsidy Program for holidays, vacations, and professional development or planning time; 5) issuing payments to family day homes in the Child Care Subsidy program for up to three sick days to care for themselves or a family member; 6) increasing provider payment rates based on the cost methodology developed by the Department in its Child Care Cost Estimation Report; 7) ensuring that Child Care Subsidy Program vendor payment rates for infants and toddlers fully reflect the cost of care; 8) eliminating copayments for families at or below 100 percent of the federal poverty guidelines and reducing copayments for families above 100 percent of the federal poverty guidelines; 9) maximizing federal Child Care Development Funds to eliminate the waitlist for child care subsidy assistance; and 10) making all families eligible for assistance through the Child Care Subsidy Program for each child in the family who is under the age of 13 for as long as (i) the family's income does not exceed 85 percent of the state median income; (ii) the family includes at least one child who is five years of age or younger and has not started kindergarten; and (iii) the family meets all other eligibility requirements of the Child Care Subsidy Program."



Explanation

(This amendment provides $106.8 million the first year and $87.2 million the second year from the general fund to maintain Child Care Subsidy Program provisions that were temporarily provided through federal relief funding during the 2022-24 biennium.)