Jul. 15—ALBUQUERQUE — As a single mother, Noelani Charley, 21, struggled to provide her children with the care they needed.
Her 4-year-old son, who has autism and struggles with speaking to others, needed specialized care, which Charley said she struggled to get as she juggled school, work and caring for her other child.
“It was very challenging … in how I can help my children develop and how I can be able to make a livable wage and take care of them at the same time,” she told The New Mexican.
After two years of bureaucratic back-and-forths, Charley said she finally was able to enroll her boy in therapeutic services, which she said was thanks to expanded access afforded by New Mexico’s increased investments in early childhood care.
On Monday, Democratic U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich sat down in Albuquerque with parents like Charley and community providers to discuss New Mexico’s recent investments in the field and the effect they’ve had in expanding access to families.
At the forefront of that conversation was New Mexico’s landmark investment in early childhood care and education through voters’ approval in 2022 of a constitutional amendment that called for annual distributions from the Land Grant Permanent Fund for early childhood programs.
Earlier this year, the Legislative Finance Committee projected the fiscal year 2025 end balance for New Mexico’s new Early Childhood Trust Fund would be over $9 billion. Lawmakers this year also approved a nearly $95 million increase in the distribution from the trust fund each year, raising the amount sent to the Early Childhood Education and Care Department to about $250 million annually.
With the state’s increased investments, Heinrich said New Mexico now must build out its early childhood care and education framework.
“We have to figure out how to scale this, and how we can support your workforce development, your training, all the things that will allow the impact of this to not just be where we are today, but to really grow over time,” Heinrich said.
Some providers told Heinrich the state needs to work on improving wages for early childhood employees.
Valeria Holloway, who owns and operates Las Cruces-based day care Best of the Southwest, said she can only afford to pay her employees around $16 per hour.
After increases in recent years from the state, starting pay for early childhood workers is about $15 per hour. But that number still isn’t high enough, Holloway said.
“I want to get them to a livable wage. And I can’t do that because I’m not making enough to spread it all around,” she told The New Mexican.
While it’s unclear how it would affect child care workers’ wages, Heinrich pointed to legislation he has co-sponsored aimed at lowering child care costs for working families. According to a news release, the legislation would increase child care tax credits to around $4,000.
“We do need to bring some more resources to bear and I think a federal child care tax credit is one way to get at that, especially for economically challenged communities,” he said.
Esteban Candelaria is a corps member with Report for America, a national service program that places journalists into local newsrooms. He covers child welfare and the state Children, Youth and Families Department. Learn more about Report for America at reportforamerica.org.