5:40
Commentary
Commentary
Kentuckians deserve to see this surplus used wisely, not set aside
Investments in Medicaid, child care pay for themselves and help people thrive
Children arrive at the iKids Childhood Enrichment Center in Benton in November. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Abbey Cutrer)
It’s that time of every-other-year again: Kentucky’s General Assembly is working on the state’s budget. Advocates, policy analysts, lobbyists and constituents will fill the halls of Frankfort until mid-April, working to see their priorities get funded. What’s different this year is that there’s more than enough to go around – an unprecedented $3.7 billion budget reserve – to fund policies and programs that help all Kentuckians thrive. After two decades of recession, inflation, economic hit after economic hit, it’s a refreshing reality.?
We deserve to see this surplus used wisely, not set aside. It’s time for Kentucky to invest in itself. From clean drinking water to better roads, addressing substance use and investing in education, affordable housing and disaster recovery, there are many priorities in need of investment to help ensure a healthier, more vibrant future for Kentucky. Every family and local economy in the state benefits from a strong health care safety net and child care industry.
Despite increase, House budget won’t save Kentucky child care from ‘cliff,’ advocates say
By fully funding Medicaid, lawmakers will support Kentucky’s hospitals, local economies, health care workforce, and the one in three Kentuckians who use Medicaid for their health care, including over 650,000 children. Policymakers have made smart, upstream Medicaid investments in recent years: hospital incentives for improved health outcomes, reimbursement for certified community health workers, 12-months of postpartum coverage, better rates for Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) providers, supported employment and housing for those with serious mental illness (SMI), and healthy reentry supports for Kentuckians leaving incarceration.?
These policies are moving Kentucky’s needle in a healthier direction. Since Medicaid’s expansion in 2014, Kentucky has been rising steadily in America’s Health Rankings, and fully funding Medicaid means continuing our upward trajectory towards better health. Cuts to Medicaid funding wouldn’t just harm low-income families, it would mean jeopardizing federal matching dollars (roughly 80 cents for every 20 cents the state spends). That weakens our entire health care system, reducing access to care for every Kentuckian. To improve health outcomes and economic prospects of Kentuckians, Medicaid is one of Kentucky’s best investments.
Another bright spot for families and children, Kentucky recently became a national leader – literally No. 1 – for innovative investments in the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP). For the first time, child care workers became eligible to participate in CCAP, enabling more than 5,000 children to remain in child care and more than 3,000 child care workers to continue working. With less than 13,000 child care workers across the commonwealth, this investment likely saved our child care industry from completely crumbling under the economic pressures of the pandemic.?
But Kentucky’s child care industry was struggling even before COVID-19. In the span of a decade, Kentucky lost 46% of our child care providers, a precipitous slide that only stabilized with an infusion of a billion dollars in federal pandemic aid. In our survey of nearly 800 child care centers, a majority indicated that without CCAP improvements and relief payments from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA), they would have likely closed in the past two years. One in four still face that uncertainty.?
Kentucky legislature asked to end long, worrying wait lists for adults with disabilities
Stabilization payments that allowed child care providers to increase wages and make facility investments have already ended and the remaining enhanced federal funds expire in September. What happens if we get to September’s funding cliff without sufficient investment from the state? Upwards of 554 child care programs could close, 41,000 children lose their daycare slot, and $92 million in family earnings would be lost from parents cutting hours or leaving the workforce altogether. Lawmakers must answer the urgent need to maintain our child care capacity at $330 million per year.?
Child care is the industry that supports all industries. If we ever want to expand capacity to serve thousands of families on waiting lists for a spot and meet workforce demands for safe, high-quality child care, more will be needed. But, investing in the livelihoods of families with children is worth it. In real dollars and “sense” — for every $1 dollar invested in child care, $4-$9 are returned to the economy. Significant need, meet significant investment. Significant investment, meet significant return.
Kentucky is at a crossroads. We’ve witnessed historic economic growth, but not every sector or region has kept pace with that growth. Amid egregious inflation and spiraling costs, not every family has seen that growth trickle down into their pocketbooks. Kentucky still faces troubling shortages among nurses, teachers, child care, affordable housing, and mental health care. Thousands of vulnerable children and adults with disabilities remain on years-long waiting lists for services they need to live. Fully funding Medicaid, expanding waiver slots, investing $330M per year in child care, creating refundable tax credits for moms and babies — all of this and more is achievable in 2024’s budget. Our children, our families, and our economy cannot afford to wait.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our website. AP and Getty images may not be republished. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of any other photos and graphics.
Kelly Taulbee
Kelly Taulbee is the director of communications and cevelopment for Kentucky Voices for Health. Prior to joining KVH in 2020, Kelly gained more than 13 years of experience in Kentucky state and local government sectors. Some of her previous roles include serving as special advisor to Louisville Metro Government, policy advisor for the House Democratic Caucus of Kentucky, legislative aide in former Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear’s Office for Legislative Affairs, and lobbying for Goss Samford PLLC. Kelly is a 2008 graduate of Centre College, and she and her husband John are lifelong Kentuckians.
Kelly Taulbee