Providers Weighing in to Improve Child Care Services!

Provider input is needed to make sure improvements that are currently being discussed to streamline and simplify child care services make sense for your work and families you serve. Please answer the following questions about possible improvements to how child care works!

Reimbursement rates: California's reimbursement rate system is complex. This means many providers can be unsure they are receiving the reimbursement that they expect, and agencies use a lot of staff's time to calculate payments. What changes would help address without lowering providers' reimbursements?

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* Question 1: Which of the following rate schedules do you tend to charge most clients (choose one)?

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* Question 2: Do you currently provide special needs or after hours care for which you charge a separate rate to any of your families?

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* Question 3: Rate how important it is for you to be able to continue charging the following rates, with 1 being very important, 2 being somewhat important, and 3 being not at all important.

  1- Very important 2- Somewhat important 3- Not at all important
Infant care
After hours care
Preschool age care
Special Needs care
School age care
Part-time rate

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* Family fees: across the state, either AP agencies or providers collect family fees, which parents start paying when they meet certain income levels.

Question 4: As a family child care provider, would you prefer to (choose one):

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* Question 5: In general, do you think the amount of fees the families that you serve pay is too high, too low, or just right (choose one)?

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* Program Oversight: Currently, the California Department of Education oversees nearly all child care programs. The Governor has proposed to change this -- shifting child care programs to Department of Social Services, county offices like welfare departments, or a new agency.

Question 6: Rate how the current child care system meets these goals, with 1=very well, 2= somewhat well, and 3 = not well at all:

  1 = very well 2 = somewhat well 3 = not well at all
Timeliness and accuracy of payments to providers
Treats families and providers with respect
Provides strict oversight of public funds for child care
Clear and timely communication with providers and families
Consistent rules regarding family fee collection, provider payments, and eligibility determination
Link with K-12 system to ensure quality in child care programs
Utilizing community agencies like APs, R&R Networks, and Networks

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* Question 7: From the list below number 1 to 5 from which goal is the most important to the least important. Put a "1" beside the goal you think is the most important to fight for, and number on down to a "5" beside the goal you think is the least important to fight for if the system is reformed:

  1 = Most important 2 3 4 5 = Least important
Timeliness and accuracy of payments to providers
Treat families and providers with respect
Ensure strict oversight of public funds for child care
Clear and timely communication with providers
Consistent rules regarding family fee collection, provider payments, and eligibility determination

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* Question 8: If there are minimum standards for child care services are established, does it matter to you which agency (California Department of Education, Department of Social Services, or another agency) oversees child care programs and funding?

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* Contractor Reform: California funds 87 separate Alternative Payment agencies and more than 35 Family Child Care Home Education Networks, all of which set policies and procedures for work with providers and family. What are ways to streamline and standardize?

Question 9: Rate how important do you think each of the following reforms are for improving the child care system, with 1 being very important, 2 being somewhat important and 3 being not at all important/oppose:

  1 = very important 2 = somewhat important 3 = not at all important/oppose
Require a direct deposit option for providers.
Set performance standards that AP agencies and other contractors meet as a condition for funding, such as timeliness and accuracy of payments to providers.
Reduce the number of AP agencies that are in operation.
Eliminate Networks and transfer their funding to AP agencies.
Require state agency to guarantee family service and provider pay in the event an AP agency or other contractor cannot fulfill its contract.

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* IT/Data Systems: Automation could standardize and speed up provider payments and other aspects of child care system.

Question 10: What would you pay toward the purchase of electronic equipment at your facility to enable parent sign-in that eliminates the need for ink signatures and paper timesheets and speeds up payment:

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* Are you interested in working with other providers as part of Child Care Providers United’s work to find solutions to reforming how our child care system works?

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* Please enter your email address to subscribe to our email list:

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* Thanks for your input. Child Care Providers United will continue to need provider involvement to make difficult changes to improve how California’s child care system better serves families. Join our work!

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