Did you know?
The State of Texas requires 
a minimum of 8 hours training 
to work with children1 
while they require 1,500 hours 
of training to cut your hair2.
 

1 http://www.dfps.state.tx.us/  
2
http://www.license.state.tx.us/


Facts

There are almost 108,000 young children in child care in Tarrant County every work day. These children are in centers, family child care programs or being cared for by a neighbor or family member.

In Tarrant County, there are 1,454 licensed/registered facilities. Over 7% of these centers are accredited by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) and almost 2% of family child care programs are accredited by the National Association for Family Child Care (NAFCC). National accreditation is the highest benchmark of quality.

Business Impact
  • 25% of employees with children have problems with child care availability 3-5 times in a 3 month period.
  • Employers nationally pay $3 billion a year due to absenteeism directly related to child care.
School Impact

The Fort Worth ISD spends $5M a year on children who have to repeat kindergarten, first or second grade. Children who attend high-quality programs prior to entering school:

  • Are less likely to be retained in grade and less frequently assigned to special education classes; and
  • Have better school attendance rates and lower dropout rates.
Community Impact

Children who were enrolled in high-quality programs are:

  • Less likely to participate in at-risk behaviors as teens;
  • Have a lower rate of unemployment.
  • Show potential for higher lifetime earnings.
State Allocation of Quality Funding

In 2002, the State of Texas allocated $2M to improve the quality of care in Tarrant County . By 2005, that funding had dropped to less than $300K.

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