The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide
The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result

CentraCare Woods Farmer Seed & Nursery Pediatric/Welch
Home Featured News

Lack of daycare reaches crisis stage

Dennis Dalman by Dennis Dalman
May 11, 2023
in Featured News, News, Sartell – St. Stephen, St. Joseph
0
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

by Dennis Dalman

news@thenewsleaders.com

A lack of daycare for children affects not just panicking parents but virtually everyone in society in one way or another. Just one example is employers. Many of them struggle to retain employees who, because of lack of daycare, quit their jobs and stay at home with one or more children.

Those points were brought home strongly by two employees of United Way of Central Minnesota. The  Newsleader recently conducted an interview with Sara Hagen, community childcare coordinator; and Alexis Lutgen, director of financial stability and co-chair of mental-health work.

“It (daycare) is a community issue,” Hagen said. “It affects everybody, all of us.”

Currently, there is a huge need for at least 5,300 daycare openings in United Way’s coverage area – Stearns and  Benton counties and parts of Sherburne and Wright counties.

The COVID-19 pandemic, Hagen noted, wreaked havoc on in-home daycare businesses, many of the providers cutting back or quitting for good. There are multiple reasons for that, the two women said: licensing hoops and hurdles, other related costs, the need to take and/or retake daycare classes required for licensing, too many sacrifices in time with many in-home providers unable to take a weekday off. Those factors – and more – can all lead in time to burnout.

In the post COVID-19 period, the lack of daycare persists, especially in smaller towns and rural areas.

Some frantic and discouraged working parents have called up to 150 places trying to find just one spot open for one child, Hagen noted. Some parents have their children in more than one daycare center or home. There is a severe shortage of spots for infants, Lutgen said. Some daycare centers have up to a three-year waiting list for infants. It’s become so bad that some couples do their family planning around that dire fact.

Some parents must drive more than an hour to get to daycare homes or centers located a long distance from their homes. In some cases, parents must wake up their children as early as 5 a.m. to get them long distances to daycare providers. Lutgen, who lives in Avon, said that in nearby Albany there is only one daycare center and that parents are desperately pleading for more daycare options.

It can cost parents up to $10,000 to $14,000 annually for good quality daycare. And the providers, the two women said, are not seeing huge profits from those payments because the costs they spend for their daycare facilities and other needs keep rising. Reimbursement rates for providers do not keep pace with inflation. Some in-home daycare operators do not even have health insurance – unless they can be on a spouse’s policy.

Like in-home daycare providers, burnout is also happening to some degree among staff members at commercial daycare centers. In some cases, those workers do not get any recognition, the kind that brings better wages and benefits.

“The system is broken,” Hagen said. “There must be increased recognition and wages for the profession (daycare service).”

Hope rises

Fortunately, there is hope on the horizon, according to Lutgen and Hagen, who said more and more people are realizing how vitally important daycare service is to children, parents, relatives, employers – indeed to all people and relationships in a healthy society.

Hagen and Lutgen have had many brain-storm sessions with so many people from all walks of life, including legislators. So many are now understanding the absolute urgency in strengthening daycare opportunities and options. And there is a legislative effort to find solutions to the crisis.

Some proposed solutions are the following:

Working with some businesses to help create on-site childcare service.

Flexible spending accounts to help spend down the costs.

Increasing recognition and wages for providers.

“There are many facets to the crisis,” Lutgen said. “We are working with all people and discussing all ideas. That keeps us hopeful because we are surrounded by people who feel passionately about the need for daycare. Minnesota is doing a lot to find solutions.”

Hagen agreed, saying efforts to increase and strengthen the daycare profession are moving forward.

“We are lucky to be living in an area with like-minded people dedicated to solving this crisis,” she said. “They understand it is a community issue. It affects everybody.”

Previous Post

Spring cleaning

Next Post

‘Living Memory’ event cancelled

Dennis Dalman

Dennis Dalman

Dalman was born and raised in South St. Cloud, graduated from St. Cloud Tech High School, then graduated from St. Cloud State University with a degree in English (emphasis on American and British literature) and mass communications (emphasis on print journalism). He studied in London, England for a year (1980-81) where he concentrated on British literature, political science, the history of Great Britain and wrote a book-length study of the British writer V.S. Naipaul. Dalman has been a reporter and weekly columnist for more than 30 years and worked for 16 of those years for the Alexandria Echo Press.

Next Post

‘Living Memory’ event cancelled

Please login to join discussion

Rock on Trucks Autobody 2000 NIB - shared Pediatric Dentistry Pine Country Bank Quill & Disc Scherer Trucking Welch Dental Care Williams Dingmann

SJWOT Talamore 1 Talamore 2 Country Manor Country Manor - 2

Search

No Result
View All Result

Categories

Recent Posts

  • St. Augusta woman missing from Willmar area
  • Two-vehicle collision sends three to hospital
  • Tree-cutting mishap sends Eden Valley man to hospital
  • Regular school board meeting Sartell-St. Stephen public schools ISD 748
  • General notice to control or eradicate noxious weeds

City Links

Sartell
St. Joseph
St. Stephen

School District Links

Sartell-St. Stephen school district
St. Cloud school district

Chamber Links

Sartell Chamber
St. Joseph Chamber

Community

Calendar

Citizen Spotlight

Criers

People

Notices

Funerals/Visitions

Obituary

Police Blotter

Public Notices

Support Groups

About Us

Contact Us

News Tips

Submissions

Advertise With Us

Print Advertising

Digital Advertising

2024 Promotions

Local Advertising Rates

National Advertising Rates

© 2025 Newleaders

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide

© 2025 Newleaders