<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/10/politics/10poverty.html>

March 10, 2006
Federal Plan for Changes in Child Care Draws Protest
By ERIK ECKHOLM

A Bush administration plan to reorganize programs for low-income
families has brought protests by service agencies around the country,
which fear it signals a waning in the federal commitment to child care
assistance for working mothers.

Some 240 agencies and advocacy groups have signed a letter to the
secretary of health and human services, Michael O. Leavitt, asking him
not to downgrade the Child Care Bureau, a unit created by the Clinton
administration to oversee subsidies for low-income mothers and improve
the quality of child care.

The proposed change, the letter says, "minimizes the importance of
child care assistance in supporting working families, particularly
low-income parents."

The letter was delivered yesterday to the Department of Health and
Human Services and to Congressional leaders, said Helen Blank of the
National Women's Law Center, which collected the signatures. Signers
included the Child Welfare League of America, the Y.W.C.A. and Easter
Seals.

The apparent downgrading of the Child Care Bureau has also stirred
concern in Congress, where Democrats and Republicans are discussing an
appeal to the administration.

The plan, which requires no Congressional approval, was made known to
lawmakers in a letter from Mr. Leavitt on Feb. 22. Among other changes
to improve "efficiency and effectiveness," he wrote, the bureau, which
now stands alone, is to be folded into the Office of Family
Assistance, which oversees the drive to put welfare mothers into jobs.

All sides agree that child care subsidies are needed to help welfare
recipients, the poorest of the poor, go to work. But by law, federal
aid is also given more widely to mothers in low-paying jobs, who may
be struggling to stay off welfare in the first place.

The Child Care Bureau will send some $5 billion to the states this
year for child care programs and oversee the spending of billions more
in state funds. It also sponsors research and promotes using day care
as an educational opportunity. Placing it in the family assistance
office, critics fear, will limit its vision and impact.

"Child care assistance is critical for low-income working families as
well as those transitioning off welfare," said Joan Lombardi, who in
1995 became the first chief of the bureau and now heads the Children's
Project, a research and advocacy group in Washington. "This is a step
backward for working families."

Critics say the change is the latest of several administration
decisions that will limit aid for child care in an era when growing
legions of the working poor need it more than ever.

But Wade F. Horn, assistant secretary for children and families, said
in a telephone interview that the planned consolidation of offices
would "create synergy."

With welfare reforms, Dr. Horn said, the family assistance office
spends less on cash payments to mothers and more on work supports,
both for women leaving welfare and for those struggling to avoid it.

"We do believe that with finite resources, we ought to target them on
those who are most in need, and those are the people trying to escape
welfare," he said.

In another change that has prompted questions, Mr. Leavitt wrote in
his letter of Feb. 22 that program officers in the department's 10
regional bureaus would report directly to their respective chiefs in
Washington, rather than through regional administrators.

Critics say this will make it harder for regional administrators to
coordinate activities and will strengthen the position of political
appointees in Washington over career experts in the field. But Dr.
Horn said it would eliminate wasteful layers of bureaucracy and help
bring consistency to programs around the country.

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