Virginia Regulatory Town Hall
Agency
Department of Education
 
Board
State Board of Education
 
Guidance Document Change: The overarching goal of the Child Care Subsidy Program is to improve equitable access to high quality affordable child care options for eligible families, ultimately improving children’s school readiness for kindergarten. Virginia will accomplish this implementing policies and processes that: 1. Are flexible and responsive to families’ needs and realities; 2. Prioritize higher levels of support to families with the fewest resources; and 3. Ensure families have equal access to the broad array of child care options. Child care services are child-centered, family-focused services that support the family goals of economic self-sufficiency and child development by providing for the supervision, protection and well-being of the child while the parent is participating in an approved activity. The purpose of the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) is to increase the availability, affordability, and quality of child care services. Toward this end, guidance and service strategies are designed to meet the following goals: 1. To provide low-income and otherwise eligible families with the financial resources to find and afford quality child care. 2. To ensure that the child care program contributes to the broader objective of self-sufficiency. 3. To provide child care to children with parents who are trying to achieve independence from public assistance. 4. To promote parental choice in the selection of child care. 5. To empower working parents to make their own decisions regarding the child care that best suits their family’s needs. 6. To provide consumer education to help parents make informed choices about child care. 7. To ensure that subsidy dollars are provided to the neediest families. 8. To enhance the quality as defined by VQB5, Virginia’s new statewide measurement and improvement system, and increase the supply of child care for all families. 9. To improve the coordination among child care programs and early childhood development programs in partnership with Virginia’s Ready Regions. 10. To design a flexible program that provides for the changing needs of recipient families and engage families in their children's development and learning. 11. To provide uninterrupted services to families and providers, to the extent of available funding, to support parental education, training, job search, and employment and continuity of care that minimizes disruptions to children's learning and development.
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9/8/22  3:28 pm
Commenter: Anonymous

Eligibility limits
 

The job search eligibility factor should me more closely monitored. Many families who are employed or in school are having difficulty finding space available for their children, and thus their application is denied. Jobs are available everywhere we look- there is no legitimate need for a parent to have access to 12 months of child care and have no employment at the end of that period, then be eligible again for another 12 months, and so on. Why not have a 90-day eligibility period for job search like we do for homelessness? At the end of 90 days, the parent  must submit employment verification or the case closes. At the same time, now that children are in school, why would a parent need before and after care for job search? The time they have while the child is in school is adequate time for the parent to apply for jobs, interview, etc. I think the state has their eligibility requirements crossed- job searching parents with school-age children should not be eligible, while working parents with children in school should be eligible for the income exception even without a child under 5 years old. Please consider additional changes.

CommentID: 128529