Work-Family Balance

A Quick Thanks for Mother's Day

May 9, 2008 - 12:21pm

 This Sunday we honor the 83 million moms in America on Mother’s Day.  We owe our Moms our lives and our thanks.  Mother’s Day also turns our attention to our children and the need for more focus on them.  Unfortunately, families with children receive a dwindling share for federal expenditures. Scholars Eugene Steuerle and Adam Carasso have found that between 1960 and 2005, federal spending on children declined from 20.1 percent of the domestic budget to just 15.4 percent, while non-child Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid spending soared from 22.1 percent to 45.9 percent.  This is not good for the development of our future generation.

It is within families that many Americans find the support and love to live their lives with joy.  Many Americans work increasingly hard and it is within families that they experience unconditional love and support in times of trouble.  For couples that do not have children, nuclear and extended families provide critical emotional support.  In a variety of emotional and psychological ways, families enhance the lives of millions of Americans.  And through children, mothers help ensure our future.

Let’s thank our mothers for all they do to make our families what they are.

Let’s let Mother’s Day be a wake-up call for us to invest more in our children.  

Rev. Gray directs the New America Foundation’s Workforce and Family Program

 

Primary Watch: Barack Obama's Early Education Agenda

April 10, 2008 - 4:49pm

Yesterday we explored Senator Hillary Clinton’s early education agenda. Today, we’re taking a look at Senator Barack Obama’s early education proposals.

Focusing on Zero-to-Five

The centerpiece of Barack Obama’s early education agenda would be a new program of Early Learning Challenge Grants, which would provide states with funding to support quality child care, early education, and other services for pregnant women and children from birth through age five. States could use Early Learning Challenge Grant funds to support voluntary, high-quality preschool programs for three- and four-year olds, but universal pre-k is not the central focus of Obama’s early education strategy. Instead, states would be given flexibility in how they choose to expand quality pre-k and other early education programs.

Primary Watch: Hillary Clinton's Early Education Agenda

April 9, 2008 - 3:44pm

Yesterday, we asked why there hasn't been more attention focused on early education issues so far in this election cycle, noting that both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have released detailed and ambitious early education agendas. Today we'll explore Senator Clinton's early education agenda. Tomorrow we'll look at Senator Obama's early education plan.

Supporting High-Quality Universal Pre-K

The centerpiece of Senator Clinton's early education agenda is her Universal Pre-k Plan, which her campaign rolled out nearly a year ago as her first major education policy proposal and one of her earliest big policy releases. Senator Clinton's plan would provide grants to states to establish high-quality pre-k programs. In order to receive funds states would have to:

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