10,000 Kids On Voucher Waitlist


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Naomi Veerasammy and her 2-year-old daughter leave their Jamaica, Queens, apartment weekday mornings by 6:30 a.m. and head to the home of whichever friend or relative has agreed to watch the toddler that day.

Veersammy, a paraprofessional at a public elementary school, relies on a rotating cast of relatives and friends to watch her daughter for little to no pay, so she can still make it to work by 8 a.m. on the city bus.

The single mom nets under $2,000 a month in income and can’t afford full-time day care, which costs between $1,500 to $2,000 a month for the average city toddler.

“It’s very, very hard on me financially, mentally, physically to find a sitter for my daughter every day,” Veersammy said, adding that her daughter needs stability.

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Hoping for stable child care, Veerasammy applied for child care vouchers worth an average of $300 a week for kids up to age 13 from low-income families across the state.

Veerasammy met the income criteriabut the city stopped enrolling new families in May. She’s now on a waitlist that has mushroomed to 10,000 city children. It’s a glaring indication of both the exploding child care affordability crisis for the city’s middle- and low-income families and the insufficiency of the current publicly funded options to help defray those costs, experts said.

The massive waitlist is also an acute crisis in and of itself — one that threatens to push families with young children out of the city and shutter small child care providers who rely on vouchers for income.

Andrea Davilar, a family child care provider in St. Albans, Queens, currently has only four of her 12 full-day seats filled. She suspects there are families on the waitlist who are interested in enrolling their kids, but can’t until they receive vouchers.

the و of و families – تفاصيل مهمة

“Are they trying to force us out of business?” she said of the city’s waitlist. “They have to remember we are the backbone behind the workforce.”

Losing family child care providers is something the city can ill afford at a time when incoming Mayor Zohran Mamdani is hoping to provide universal child care — an expansion that would likely lean heavily on home-based programs.

That’s part of why some observers are encouraging Mamdani to make clearing the voucher waitlist his first step on what could be a long road to building free child care.

Issuing vouchers to those 10,000 kids would bring “virtually free child care immediately” to a wide swath of city families, said Lauren Melodia, an economist at the New School’s Center for New York City Affairs who studies child care.

child و to و care – تفاصيل مهمة

“It’s not the big vision … but you want to be able to deliver services to people while you’re building the big vision,” she added.

Mamdani’s transition team didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Vouchers are a key tool for infant, toddler, after-school care

The vouchers can be redeemed at a wide range of child care providers or even used to pay approved relatives or friends. They’re an especially critical resource for families with kids 2 and under who don’t qualify for the city’s free 3-K and prekindergarten programs as well as those who need care outside of school hours.

Separate from the vouchers, the city funds a limited number of free seats for kids 2 and under from low-income families. But families often don’t know about the seats or how to apply, experts have said. Roughly 40% of those seats were unfilled last year.

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Officials in Mayor Eric Adams’ administration said the voucher program’s costs are soaring because of the program’s popularity, an increase in the voucher’s value, and a growing number of families who are supposed to receive subsidized child care as a condition of their federal welfare benefits.

Officials predict the city will need a total of $2.9 billion from the state in the upcoming budget — $1.8 billion than the city typically receives — just to maintain the program.

Melodia, the economist, said the cost of providing vouchers to all the families on the waitlist for a year would be modest: around $155 million.

Gordon Tepper, a spokesperson for Gov. Kathy Hochul, said “no one has done to support and expand child care statewide” than the governor, noting that she has doubled funding for the voucher program and wants to reach universal child care.

the و to و a – تفاصيل مهمة

Demand for vouchers boomed as eligibility widened

The voucher program’s current budget crunch traces back to a series of pandemic-era changes.

Prior to the pandemic, the city issued the majority of vouchers to families receiving federal cash assistance, whose child care the city is required to subsidize because their benefits come with work requirements.

Those work requirements relaxed during the pandemic, keeping families at home with less need for child care. The number of vouchers going to those families fell from over 55,000 in 2017 to under 19,000 in 2022.

That drop, combined with a one-time infusion of federal relief funds, allowed Hochul to significantly expand the eligibility criteria for the vouchers, opening them to families who make under 85% of the state median income, or roughly $114,000 a year for a family of four.

the و to و of – تفاصيل مهمة

At the same time, Hochul nearly doubled the value of the vouchers, from an average of $154 a week in 2019 to $301 a week last year. The change made the vouchers attractive to families and providers — and expensive for the state.

City families flocked to the vouchers. Enrollment in the low-income voucher program skyrocketed from under 9,000 2022 to nearly 70,000 this year.

The changes created a major budget cliff.

After federal pandemic aid dried up, city officials resumed enforcing work requirements, bringing an expected surge of families who receive federal assistance to request vouchers.

to و families و the – تفاصيل مهمة

To avoid kicking thousands of families out of the program each month, city officials asked the state, which has historically funded most of the voucher system, to commit an additional $900 million to the $1 billion city program.

Hochul eventually agreed to free up an additional $350 million for the program, contingent on the city chipping in the same amount.

That infusion allowed the city to continue offering vouchers to the majority of families who were already enrolled, city officials said. But it wasn’t enough to enroll new families.

Starting last May, the city began placing eligible new applicants for low-income vouchers on a waitlist, which has grown from 1,500 in August to its current 10,000.

the و to و city – تفاصيل مهمة

Parents on voucher waitlist are desperate for relief

For families stuck on the waitlist, shouldering the costs of child care on their own often comes at the expense of other basic needs.

Milana Kochishvili, a mother of two elementary school children in southern Brooklyn, applied for vouchers after her husband was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, leaving the family to rely on her $72,000 annual income as a payroll specialist at a plumbing company. But she has been on the waitlist for months.

The only after-school option that works with her schedule costs about $800 a month. With $4,500 a month in take-home pay — nearly half of which goes to pay rent — it’s an expense she can’t afford.

“I’m in a position now where I can only afford basics,” she said. “God forbid the car breaks or something like that, that’s it.”

a و in و her – تفاصيل مهمة

Adams recently launched an expansion of free, city-funded after-school programswith a pledge to add 20,000 seats by 2027. But for some parents who work longer hours, the schedule of the city’s free programs don’t fit their needs.

Kimberly Watson, a single mom of an elementary student in Brooklyn, works as a caseworker in a hospital and needed an after-school program with longer hours. The private program she found costs $450 a month — an untenable expense for Watson, who takes home roughly $2,700 a month in income and spends $1,200 on rent.

She applied for a child care voucher and cleared the eligibility threshold, but was placed on the waitlist. Paying for child care has left her behind on some utility bills — and even on her rent, she said.

Getting a voucher would mean she can “just cut back on one thing that I have to worry about so I can catch up on other things.”

a و on و and – تفاصيل مهمة

For Veerasammy, the paraprofessional with a 2-year-old, there could be some economic relief on the horizon: a bill supported by both Mamdani and a supermajority on City Council that would give paraprofessionals a $10,000 recurring annual bonus.

But she said that money would go toward paying off credit card debt, leaving her still in need of a voucher.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools. This story was originally published by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at ckbe.at/newsletters.

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Disclaimer: This news article has been republished exactly as it appeared on its original source, without any modification.
We do not take any responsibility for its content, which remains solely the responsibility of the original publisher.

Author:Michael Elsen-Rooney
Published on:2025-12-04 23:30:00
Source: www.the74million.org

!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s){if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n; n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version=’2.0′;n.queue=();t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)(0);s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window, document,’script’,’https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js’); fbq(‘init’, ‘626037510879173’); // 626037510879173 fbq(‘track’, ‘PageView’);{“@context”:”http://schema.org”,”@type”:”NewsArticle”,”dateCreated”:”2025-12-05T06:58:53+04:00″,”datePublished”:”2025-12-05T06:58:53+04:00″,”dateModified”:”2025-12-05T06:58:53+04:00″,”headline”:”10,000 Kids on Voucher Waitlist”,”name”:”10,000 Kids on Voucher Waitlist”,”keywords”:[],”url”:”https://uaetodaynews.com/10000-kids-on-voucher-waitlist-the-74/”,”description”:”Join our zero2eight Substack community for more discussion about the latest news in early care and education. Sign up now. Naomi Veerasammy and her 2-year-old daughter leave their Jamaica, Queens, apa”,”copyrightYear”:”2025″,”articleSection”:”Education”,”articleBody”:”nnn n Join our zero2eight Substack community for more discussion about the latest news in early care and education. Sign up now.n n n n Naomi Veerasammy and her 2-year-old daughter leave their Jamaica, Queens, apartment weekday mornings by 6:30 a.m. and head to the home of whichever friend or relative has agreed to watch the toddler that day.nnVeersammy, a paraprofessional at a public elementary school, relies on a rotating cast of relatives and friends to watch her daughter for little to no pay, so she can still make it to work by 8 a.m. on the city bus.nnThe single mom nets under $2,000 a month in income and canu2019t afford full-time day care, which costs between $1,500 to $2,000 a month for the average city toddler.nnu201cItu2019s very, very hard on me financially, mentally, physically to find a sitter for my daughter every day,u201d Veersammy said, adding that her daughter needs stability.nnHoping for more stable child care, Veerasammy applied for child care vouchers worth an average of $300 a week for kids up to age 13 from low-income families across the state.nnVeerasammy met the income criteriabut the city stopped enrolling new families in May. Sheu2019s now on a waitlist that has mushroomed to 10,000 city children. Itu2019s a glaring indication of both the exploding child care affordability crisis for the cityu2019s middle- and low-income families and the insufficiency of the current publicly funded options to help defray those costs, experts said.nnThe massive waitlist is also an acute crisis in and of itself u2014 one that threatens to push more families with young children out of the city and shutter small child care providers who rely on vouchers for income.nnAndrea Davilar, a family child care provider in St. Albans, Queens, currently has only four of her 12 full-day seats filled. She suspects there are families on the waitlist who are interested in enrolling their kids, but canu2019t until they receive vouchers.nnu201cAre they trying to force us out of business?u201d she said of the cityu2019s waitlist. u201cThey have to remember we are the backbone behind the workforce.u201dnnLosing family child care providers is something the city can ill afford at a time when incoming Mayor Zohran Mamdani is hoping to provide universal child care u2014 an expansion that would likely lean heavily on home-based programs.nnThatu2019s part of why some observers are encouraging Mamdani to make clearing the voucher waitlist his first step on what could be a long road to building free child care.nnIssuing vouchers to those 10,000 kids would bring u201cvirtually free child care immediatelyu201d to a wide swath of city families, said Lauren Melodia, an economist at the New Schoolu2019s Center for New York City Affairs who studies child care.nnu201cItu2019s not the big vision u2026 but you want to be able to deliver services to people while youu2019re building the big vision,u201d she added.nnMamdaniu2019s transition team didnu2019t respond to a request for comment.nVouchers are a key tool for infant, toddler, after-school carenThe vouchers can be redeemed at a wide range of child care providers or even used to pay approved relatives or friends. Theyu2019re an especially critical resource for families with kids 2 and under who donu2019t qualify for the cityu2019s free 3-K and prekindergarten programs as well as those who need care outside of school hours.nnSeparate from the vouchers, the city funds a limited number of free seats for kids 2 and under from low-income families. But families often donu2019t know about the seats or how to apply, experts have said. Roughly 40% of those seats were unfilled last year.nnOfficials in Mayor Eric Adamsu2019 administration said the voucher programu2019s costs are soaring because of the programu2019s popularity, an increase in the voucheru2019s value, and a growing number of families who are supposed to receive subsidized child care as a condition of their federal welfare benefits.nnOfficials predict the city will need a total of $2.9 billion from the state in the upcoming budget u2014 $1.8 billion more than the city typically receives u2014 just to maintain the program.nnMelodia, the economist, said the cost of providing vouchers to all the families on the waitlist for a year would be more modest: around $155 million.nnGordon Tepper, a spokesperson for Gov. Kathy Hochul, said u201cno one has done more to support and expand child care statewideu201d than the governor, noting that she has doubled funding for the voucher program and wants to reach universal child care.nDemand for vouchers boomed as eligibility widenednThe voucher programu2019s current budget crunch traces back to a series of pandemic-era changes.nnPrior to the pandemic, the city issued the majority of vouchers to families receiving federal cash assistance, whose child care the city is required to subsidize because their benefits come with work requirements.nnThose work requirements relaxed during the pandemic, keeping more families at home with less need for child care. The number of vouchers going to those families fell from over 55,000 in 2017 to under 19,000 in 2022.nnThat drop, combined with a one-time infusion of federal relief funds, allowed Hochul to significantly expand the eligibility criteria for the vouchers, opening them to families who make under 85% of the state median income, or roughly $114,000 a year for a family of four.nnAt the same time, Hochul nearly doubled the value of the vouchers, from an average of $154 a week in 2019 to $301 a week last year. The change made the vouchers more attractive to families and providers u2014 and expensive for the state.nnCity families flocked to the vouchers. Enrollment in the low-income voucher program skyrocketed from under 9,000 2022 to nearly 70,000 this year.nnThe changes created a major budget cliff.nnAfter federal pandemic aid dried up, city officials resumed enforcing work requirements, bringing an expected surge of families who receive federal assistance to request vouchers.nnTo avoid kicking thousands of families out of the program each month, city officials asked the state, which has historically funded most of the voucher system, to commit an additional $900 million to the $1 billion city program.nnHochul eventually agreed to free up an additional $350 million for the program, contingent on the city chipping in the same amount.nnThat infusion allowed the city to continue offering vouchers to the majority of families who were already enrolled, city officials said. But it wasnu2019t enough to enroll new families.nnStarting last May, the city began placing eligible new applicants for low-income vouchers on a waitlist, which has grown from 1,500 in August to its current 10,000.nParents on voucher waitlist are desperate for reliefnFor families stuck on the waitlist, shouldering the costs of child care on their own often comes at the expense of other basic needs.nnMilana Kochishvili, a mother of two elementary school children in southern Brooklyn, applied for vouchers after her husband was diagnosed with Alzheimeru2019s, leaving the family to rely on her $72,000 annual income as a payroll specialist at a plumbing company. But she has been on the waitlist for months.nnThe only after-school option that works with her schedule costs about $800 a month. With $4,500 a month in take-home pay u2014 nearly half of which goes to pay rent u2014 itu2019s an expense she canu2019t afford.nnu201cIu2019m in a position now where I can only afford basics,u201d she said. u201cGod forbid the car breaks or something like that, thatu2019s it.u201dnnAdams recently launched an expansion of free, city-funded after-school programswith a pledge to add 20,000 seats by 2027. But for some parents who work longer hours, the schedule of the cityu2019s free programs donu2019t fit their needs.nnKimberly Watson, a single mom of an elementary student in Brooklyn, works as a caseworker in a hospital and needed an after-school program with longer hours. The private program she found costs $450 a month u2014 an untenable expense for Watson, who takes home roughly $2,700 a month in income and spends $1,200 on rent.nnShe applied for a child care voucher and cleared the eligibility threshold, but was placed on the waitlist. Paying for child care has left her behind on some utility bills u2014 and even on her rent, she said.nnGetting a voucher would mean she can u201cjust cut back on one thing that I have to worry about so I can catch up on other things.u201dnnFor Veerasammy, the paraprofessional with a 2-year-old, there could be some economic relief on the horizon: a bill supported by both Mamdani and a supermajority on City Council that would give paraprofessionals a $10,000 recurring annual bonus.nnBut she said that money would go toward paying off credit card debt, leaving her still in need of a voucher.nnChalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools. This story was originally published by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at ckbe.at/newsletters.nnnn n n n Did you use this article in your work?
nWeu2019d love to hear how The 74u2019s reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers. Tell us hown n nnn !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s){if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?n n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version=’2.0′;n.queue=();t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;n t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)(0);s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window,n document,’script’,’https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js’);n fbq(‘init’, ‘626037510879173’); // 626037510879173n fbq(‘track’, ‘PageView’);n nnnnnDisclaimer: This news article has been republished exactly as it appeared on its original source, without any modification. nWe do not take any responsibility for its content, which remains solely the responsibility of the original publisher.nnnnnnAuthor: Michael Elsen-RooneynPublished on: 2025-12-04 23:30:00nSource: www.the74million.orgn”,”publisher”:{“@id”:”#Publisher”,”@type”:”Organization”,”name”:”uaetodaynews”,”logo”:{“@type”:”ImageObject”,”url”:”https://uaetodaynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/images-e1759081190269.png”},”sameAs”:[“https://www.facebook.com/uaetodaynewscom”,”https://www.pinterest.com/uaetodaynews/”,”https://www.instagram.com/uaetoday_news_com/”]},”sourceOrganization”:{“@id”:”#Publisher”},”copyrightHolder”:{“@id”:”#Publisher”},”mainEntityOfPage”:{“@type”:”WebPage”,”@id”:”https://uaetodaynews.com/10000-kids-on-voucher-waitlist-the-74/”,”breadcrumb”:{“@id”:”#Breadcrumb”}},”author”:{“@type”:”Person”,”name”:”uaetodaynews”,”url”:”https://uaetodaynews.com/author/arabsongmedia-net/”},”image”:{“@type”:”ImageObject”,”url”:”https://i0.wp.com/uaetodaynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/nyc-child-care-voucher-waitlist-825×495.jpg?fit=825%2C495&ssl=1″,”width”:1200,”height”:495}}


Disclaimer: This news article has been republished exactly as it appeared on its original source, without any modification.
We do not take any responsibility for its content, which remains solely the responsibility of the original publisher.


Author: uaetodaynews
Published on: 2025-12-05 02:58:00
Source: uaetodaynews.com

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