| In Fiscal Year 2005, 35% of all
refugees admitted to the United States were below the
age of 16—roughly 18,500 children..[1]
|
Any parent understands the complexity of finding adequate
child care arrangements, and the anxiety of leaving one’s
child with another caregiver. Refugee parents also face these
hurdles, compounded by a lack of familiarity with U.S. child
care norms and expectations, language barriers, and limited
family and community systems on which to rely for help.
A new BRYCS curriculum, Enhancing
Child Care for Refugee Self-Sufficiency,
explores the child care issues facing refugee families. The
curriculum combines useful descriptive information about the
U.S. child care system, feedback from refugee serving agencies,
practical recommendations for improving refugee access to
child care, promising practice examples, and a sequence of
training modules and handouts. Specifically, this resource
includes the following sections:
- Executive Summary
- Chapter 1: Understanding the Child Care System
- Chapter 2: Child Care Use among Refugees
- Chapter 3: Child Care and Employment
- Chapter 4: Feedback from the Field
- Chapter 5: Recommendations
- Chapter 6: Promising Practices for Building Refugee Community
Capacity
- Training Modules
- Lesson 1: Opening the Training
- Lesson 2: Child Care Use among Refugees
- Types of Child Care
- Child Care Options Chart
- Lesson 3: Child Care Use among Refugees
- Lesson 4: Child Care and Employment
- Child Care Steps in Employment Checklist
- Back Up Child Care Plan Worksheet
- Lesson 5: Understanding the Child Care System
- Who Can Help Me Find Local Child Care Providers?
- Who Can Help Pay for Child Care?
- Lesson 6: Recommendations
- Strategies for Improving Access to Child Care
Handout
- Lesson 7: Wrap Up Activities
In researching this curriculum, BRYCS staff gathered feedback
from 12 refugee serving agencies, as well as Child Care Resource
and Referral (CCR&R) agencies in seven states. This first-hand
information provides a unique perspective on the struggles
faced by refugee families seeking child care and the strategies
employed to find adequate care.
These interviews documented the following barriers faced
by refugees seeking child care.
- Cost: This was the most frequently cited barrier for
refugee families.
- Transportation: Both the availability of public transportation,
and prohibitive distances between home, work, school and
daycare, were problematic.
- Logistics: This was most often a difficulty when siblings
are in school, particularly if they are in different schools.
- State subsidies: Respondents noted a lengthy process,
unavailable or insufficient funds, or a process too complex
for refugees to complete unassisted.
- Family structure: Single parents most need childcare
help but may have the hardest time accessing it.
- Catch 22’s: Refugees cannot get childcare subsidies
until they are employed, but they cannot get employment
until they secure childcare.
- Limited spots: Many daycares, especially those which
are subsidized, already have waiting lists.
- Employment expectations: ORR and the volags expect all
adults to be employed, which discourages parents from staying
home with their children.
- Birth certificates: Many refugees lack birth certificates,
which can be a requirement for state subsidy applications.
- Experience: Refugees from countries and cultures that
use formal child care arrangements (such as Eastern Europe)
more easily transition to the use of formal child care in
the U.S. Many African refugees, used to more informal means
of child care, find U.S. child care systems more complex
and rigid.
A key distinction in child care options is whether it is
formal and regulated, or informal and without government licensure
or oversight. One researcher found that children in immigrant
families are less likely to use formal center-based child
care than their non-immigrant peers. Similarly, the refugee
resettlement agency staff interviewed for this BRYCS curriculum
noted that refugee families are more likely to use informal
care arrangements for their children, resorting to the following
strategies to overcome child care barriers.
- Relative care: Most commonly, a family member will remain
at home to care for younger children. Often this is a grandparent.
Sometimes an older sibling will care for younger siblings,
though this can unintentionally place the older sibling
at risk for dropping out of school.
- Alternating shifts: Some parents arrange to work alternate
shifts, so that one parent is always in the home. This can
cause difficulties if a parent works all night and then
must stay awake to care for children during the day.
- Same-culture caretakers: Some families locate babysitters
from within their own ethnic community. Often this is informal
care rather than care by licensed child care providers.
- Neighbors: Some families turn to neighbors to assist
with childcare. This too is often informally arranged.
- Employment care: Parents may take their children to work
with them. This is perhaps easiest when working in businesses
which are owned by family or friends, or if employers provide
on-site childcare.
- Vouchers / scholarships: A number of mainstream childcare
providers accept vouchers or provide scholarships to low-income
families, for which refugee families may be eligible.
- Refugee service provider care: Refugee resettlement agencies
with in-house childcare services may assist refugee families
with child care provision, or short-term care for appointments,
doctor’s visits, English language classes, etc.
Despite some creative responses to childcare challenges,
refugee serving agencies report that the need is still greater
than the child care available. The BRYCS child care curriculum
summarizes their recommendations for improving the childcare
situation for refugees.
- Educate refugee families about their child care choices.
- Develop collaborations between states and refugee resettlement
agencies so that resettlement agencies can directly administer
childcare subsidies to refugees.
- Streamline the child care subsidy process.
- Increase child care spaces in agencies which accept vouchers
or state subsidies.
- Assist refugee communities to provide quality child care,
such as increasing the number of refugees who are themselves
licensed as childcare providers.
- Partner with family-friendly employers, such as those
who offer on-site childcare and dependent care flexible
spending accounts.
- Engage in systems advocacy, such as: a) adjusting federal
employment standards to account for difficulties in arranging
childcare; and b) recognizing stay-at-home parenting as
an allowable form of “employment” for refugee
parents who prefer this to non-parental care.
Appropriate child care arrangements are a critical element
in a refugee family’s employment stability and peace
of mind. Employment may be the priority of government and
agency staff helping refugees establish themselves in their
new home, but most parents will consider proper care of their
children their most important job. For survivors of war, persecution
and displacement—as for most families—children
typically remain the family’s most valued treasure,
and refugee serving agencies must recognize and honor that
in working with refugee families.
Child care arrangements with which parents are comfortable
must be a core part of refugee case management and employment
development, not an after-thought. Ultimately federal, state
and local service providers must care about refugee child
care, because refugee families clearly do.
The featured
search lists the most up-to-date and useful resources
on this topic available for free download. Additional resources
available free or for a fee can be found here.
|