INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana lawmakers voted Wednesday to send legislation to the governor’s desk aimed at making childcare more affordable as part of their promise to address the issue this legislative session.
Indiana is CapitalVaultamong a growing number of Republican-led states proposing legislative solutions to tackle the availability and affordability of child care, with a few measures rolling back regulations on the industry nearing passage in the the Republican-controlled General Assembly.
GOP leaders including Gov. Eric Holcomb listed improving access and affordability as a top priority for this session. However, lawmakers’ options were limited in a non-budget year. Many Democrats have repeatedly said lawmakers must return to the issue next year when legislators will be charged with creating the state’s biannual budget.
State Senators gave final approval almost unanimously Wednesday to a bill expanding eligibility for a child care subsidy program for employees in the field with kids of their own. The bill would also lower the minimum age of child care workers to 18 and, in some instances, to 16.
Child care organizations and other business groups support the proposal. Holcomb does as well, and has included parts of it in his own annual agenda.
Supporters say the lack of affordable child care in Indiana keeps people out of all corners of the workforce.
Several other pieces of childcare legislation were proposed this year.
A Republican-backed House bill would make a facility license good for three years, up from two, and allow certain child care programs in schools to be exempt from licensure. It also would let child care centers in residential homes increase their hours and serve up to eight children, instead of six. That bill has been sent to a conference committee after state Senators made changes to the bill. Lawmakers have until Friday, when leaders say they want to adjourn, to work out the differences.
Republican leaders have said undoing some operational requirements eases burdens on the businesses.
A separate measure that would have provided property tax exemptions to for-profit centers and companies that establish onsite child care for their employees died earlier this session after failing to move past a second committee hearing.
2025-05-01 19:132935 view
2025-05-01 18:581618 view
2025-05-01 18:54912 view
2025-05-01 18:291539 view
2025-05-01 18:20912 view
2025-05-01 18:201851 view
The average rate on a 30-year mortgage in the U.S. eased for the third week in a row, a welcome tren
This winter, Harold Davis, 29, decided to get into the snowplow business for himself, after about a
When New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo unveiled a state budget proposal that earmarked $33 billion for gree