Nonprofit Trains Service Dogs For Veterans, First Responders On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, a West Virginia based nonprofit is filling a therapeutic need for veterans and first responders by training service dogs. Caroline MacGregor has the story.

On this West Virginia Morning, a West Virginia based nonprofit is filling a therapeutic need for veterans and first responders by training service dogs. Caroline MacGregor has the story.

Also, in this show, the Biden administration is asking Congress for domestic supplemental funding to assist with the opioid crisis and child care costs — some of which would come to West Virginia. Emily Rice reports.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Caroline MacGregor produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Federal Monies Proposed To Address Opioid Crisis And Child Care Costs

The Biden-Harris administration is asking Congress for domestic supplemental funding to assist with the opioid crisis and child care costs — some of which would come to West Virginia.

The Biden-Harris administration is asking Congress for domestic supplemental funding to assist with the opioid crisis and child care costs — some of which would come to West Virginia.

If adopted, West Virginia would receive an estimated $39 million to counter fentanyl trafficking and strengthen addiction treatment, overdose prevention measures and recovery support services. 

Xavier Becerra, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, said in West Virginia, about 76 percent of the overdose deaths that occurred between May 2022 and May 2023 are due to synthetic opioids, primarily illicitly manufactured fentanyl.

“From this year to the previous year, West Virginia saw, I think, almost 1,500 deaths from overdose, most of those opioid overdoses, and the lion’s share today is driven by fentanyl,” Becerra said. “And so the $1.6 billion that the president is requesting in emergency funding for opioids would really help us target fentanyl. And let states try to make sure that they can catch someone before they overdose.”

According to provisional data from the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention, for a 12-month period ending in May 2023, 1,184 West Virginians died of an opioid overdose.

West Virginia also stands to gain $107 million for child care, if the domestic supplemental funding request is adopted by Congress. 

Becerra said pandemic-era child care stabilization increased the labor force participation for mothers with young children by an additional three percentage points.

“The president’s request is to help extend funding for many of those child care centers, over 61,000 children and their families in West Virginia benefited from those funds, and at least 1,600 childcare providers,” Becerra said. “I think the average cost of childcare in West Virginia is somewhere around $9,000. And we know that the stabilization funds end up saving families over $1,000 a year in their childcare expense per child.”

According to the Department of Health and Human Services, the price of child care for an infant in West Virginia is $8,736 per year. 

Children’s Health And Education, This West Virginia Week

On this West Virginia Week, October interim meetings of the West Virginia Legislature kicked off in Charleston. Children’s health and education continue to be in the spotlight with state leaders discussing everything from school discipline to childhood literacy. And, more on the conditions inside West Virginia jails and prisons.

On this West Virginia Week, October interim meetings of the West Virginia Legislature kicked off in Charleston. Children’s health and education continue to be in the spotlight with state leaders discussing everything from school discipline to childhood literacy. And we have more on the conditions inside West Virginia jails and prisons.

Also, thrill seekers from across the world are gathering at the New River Gorge Bridge in Fayetteville for the annual Bridge Day event this weekend.

And we hear how the end of pandemic-era benefits will affect child care costs and quality, the Black Infant and Maternal Health Working Group’s breakfast with lawmakers and a story about a practicing Appalachian witch.

Emily Rice is our host this week. Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert.

West Virginia Week is a web-only podcast that explores the week’s biggest news in the Mountain State. It’s produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Caroline MacGregor, Chris Schulz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Liz McCormick, and Randy Yohe.

Learn more about West Virginia Week.

Facing West Virginia’s Child Care Cliff

On a national level, the end of pandemic-era benefits will affect child care costs and access. West Virginia hopes to avoid those shortfalls by relying on individual child care subsidies that date back to the 1960s.

The end of pandemic-era benefits will affect child care costs and access on a national level. West Virginia hopes to avoid those shortfalls by relying on individual child care subsidies that date back to the 1960s.

Sept. 30 marked the official end of federal pandemic-related stabilization money aimed at bolstering child care services in the U.S. Meaning, states had to have spent their allotted funds by that date.

In 2021, $40 billion in funding went to child care centers across the nation from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA).

According to the Administration for Children and Families, in West Virginia, 645 child care centers and 925 child care family homes received stabilization payments totaling more than $160 million.

The child care centers used the funds to pay for personnel costs and keep programs staffed. In some cases, child care centers used the funds to keep prices lower for parents struggling to pay for child care. Child care family homes mostly used the money to pay for personal protective equipment to ensure safe environments for children and staff.

Of that $160 million total, $101 million in ARPA funding was allocated to DHHR’s child care subsidy program in order to increase reimbursement rates. 

Kent Nowviskie, deputy commissioner for Programs and Policy at the Bureau for Family Assistance at the DHHR, said the funding allowed child care providers to be paid on the basis of enrollment in their programs rather than daily attendance.

“We switched to doing something that providers had been asking for for a long time, which was to pay them a monthly rate for each child enrolled in their setting instead of a daily rate that they had to calculate based on the attendance of the child,” Nowviskie said.

While the 2021 ARPA stabilization funds were a source of additional funding, West Virginia has had access to child care subsidies since the Appalachian Regional Development Act.

“We here at the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources, or even before it was the Department of Health and Human Resources, we’ve been doing that since 1969,” Nowviskie said. “That is an ongoing thing, it is not going away, those child care subsidies are not going away.”

Nowviskie said it is important to understand that in the child care industry, subsidies refer to the payments that are made to providers for services provided to specific children.

“So it’s an individual payment per child who’s being served in a child care setting,” he said.

Nowviskie said some ARPA funds had dedicated purposes, or places they had to be spent. One of these designations was subsidy payments, so the state increased the rates it paid for each child. 

The DHHR also expanded eligibility to everyone regardless of income who met the definition of essential worker, as outlined in the governor’s March 2020 executive order.

Julie Kashen is the director of women’s economic justice and a senior fellow at The Century Foundation, a progressive think tank in Washington D.C. She said the federal grant structure allowed families of more diverse incomes to qualify nationally.

“One of the differences between the stabilization grants and the supplemental grants is that the stabilization grants were able to reach a wider variety of families because they didn’t have that same income restriction,” Kashen said. “There was much more of a combination of the poorest families, lower income families, middle class families, were able to benefit from that.”

Nowviskie said the DHHR has taken steps to mitigate the loss of ARPA funds but in October 2022, the DHHR restored income eligibility requirements for child care subsidies.

“When we saw that those monies were dwindling, we circled the wagons here to try to figure out what we could do to stretch those out as long as we could,” Nowviskie said. “And we put an income limit back on.”

When this ARPA funding allocated for subsidy assistance was exhausted in May 2023, the DHHR set aside $24 million of Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) funding to allow providers to continue being paid by enrollment for services rendered through August 2024.

“So until September of next year, services provided through August of next year, then we’ll be able to keep the pay by enrollment going as well as those increased rates,” Nowviskie said.

Nowviskie and other experts agree a long term solution would be the best case scenario.

“We don’t anticipate readjusting rates downward,” Nowviskie said. “But absent an influx of additional funding, we may have to go back to a pay by attendance model, which is not ideal. Child care providers nationally are advocating and trying to move toward the pay by enrollment model. In fact, I think Congress is looking at the issue. So we hope they have some additional funding that will come along with that.”

Bill Franko is an associate professor of political science and director of graduate studies at the WVU Eberly College of Arts and Sciences. He worries that child care settings will struggle to pay their staff at the same rate they have since 2021.

“What’s going to happen is the centers are not going to have the money to pay living wages to the child center workers,” Franko said. “You’re gonna have fewer people who are going to want to enter that industry or stay in that industry. It’s going to be much more temporary, like it was prior to the 2021 influx of the child care stabilization funds.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

Child Care Centers To Receive Final Pandemic-Era Payment

A final pandemic era payment will be issued to child care centers across the state, according to Gov. Jim Justice.

Starting Sept. 30, states will lose access to federal pandemic-related stabilization money aimed at bolstering child care services in the U.S. but Gov. Jim Justice said Friday that there is enough leftover pandemic-related stabilization money to distribute a final payment for October.

In 2021, $40 billion in funding went to child care centers across the nation from the American Rescue Plan Act

With this funding set to expire, a bill in Congress to extend child care funding has gone nowhere.

According to the Administration for Children and Families, in West Virginia, 645 child care centers and 925 child care family homes received stabilization payments totaling more than $160 million.

The child care centers used the funds to pay for personnel costs and keep programs staffed. In some cases, child care centers used the funds to keep prices lower for parents struggling to pay for child care that now costs an average of $15,000 a year for one child, according to a Care.com study.

Child care family homes used the money to pay for personal protective equipment (PPE) to ensure safe environments for children and staff.

“It will be slightly lower than the normal monthly payment,” Justice said. “However, again, you got to realize this is just an extra payment that nobody really expected.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

Child Care Access A Barrier To Improving Child Well-Being In W.Va.

West Virginia ranked 42nd in the nation for child well-being in this year’s KIDS COUNT Data Book from the Annie E. Casey Foundation. Each year, the foundation chooses a specific hurdle to improving child well-being, and this year’s focus is the state of child care.

West Virginia ranked 42nd in the nation for child well-being in this year’s KIDS COUNT Data Book from the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

The data book is a 50-state report of analyzing how children and families are faring. The analysis is based on metrics, such as education, health, family and community.

Tricia Kingery, executive director of West Virginia Kids Count, said the biggest factor in the state’s ranking is its economic outlook.

“The underlying factor as to why we’re 36th in economic well-being, 47th in education, 39th in health, and 34th in family and community is the economic landscape of our state,” Kingery said. “We have to invest in working families. And that does mean jobs. It does mean benefits, it does mean child care.”

Each year, the foundation chooses a specific hurdle to improving child well-being, and this year’s focus is the state of child care.

Tiffany Gale, owner and director of Miss Tiffany’s Early Childhood Education House in Weirton, as well as the family child care chair for the West Virginia Association for Young Children, said a lack of accessible and affordable child care is holding back West Virginia.

“It is such a huge issue not only for child care in general, but also for business and economic development and for workforce participation,” Gale said. “Families cannot get to work without access to child care, and businesses cannot thrive without workers and workers need child care.” 

Gale said there isn’t enough child care in the state of West Virginia to support the businesses that already exist, nor to support the businesses that are coming. Gale and Kingery both said many people who want to work cannot because they do not have reliable child care.

Beyond the immediate impact to the workforce, Gale said there is also a long-term impact from the lack of access to child care.

“Early childhood education is extremely important, because 80 percent of brain growth happens before kindergarten,” she said. “We can change the trajectory of a child’s life, and really the trajectory of communities in the first five years of care.”

West Virginia Kids Count plans to publish a more detailed, county by county report of child well-being in the fall.

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