THU AM News: Report highlights ‘steep decline’ in child care affordability for those in subsidy program; DWD announces worker’s comp rate decline

— The rising cost of child care in the state has driven a “steep decline” in affordability for those participating in the Wisconsin Shares child care subsidy program for the working poor, state officials announced. 

The Department of Children and Families and Gov. Tony Evers yesterday released the results of the 2024 Market Rate Survey, highlighting a “larger-than-predicted” increase in the cost of child care between 2022 and 2023. 

The increase in monthly child care costs was 11% for families with an infant in center-based care, while the increase was 14% for those with an infant in family-based care, according to the report. Both figures are well above the 4.9% inflation rate for that period, the release notes. 

In a recent online briefing, DCF officials highlighted the drop in affordability for Wisconsin Shares participants due to this change. They noted affordability in this context means the maximum subsidy under the program is at or above the price of the slot at a child care provider. 

In 2023, just 50% of slots were considered affordable under this definition, compared to 74% in 2022. By comparison, both the federal Administration for Children and Families and Wisconsin law have 75% of child care slots being affordable as their target threshold, the report notes. 

Wisconsin Shares provides subsidies to families with an initial gross income of up to 185% of the federal poverty level, which is $57,720 this year for a family of four. Those on the program are responsible for a copay based on their income, family size and the number of children in care.

During the briefing, DCF Secretary Emilie Amundson pointed to reduced funding for the Child Care Counts Program as a compounding factor for issues in the Wisconsin Shares program. 

The two are separate programs, and Evers used federal pandemic funds to create Child Care Counts to provide subsidies to providers that can be used to recruit and retain staff, among other things.

The Child Care Counts payments were reduced by half in May 2023 after federal funding ended, the release notes. The guv proposed funding it with $340 million in state money in the 2023-25 budget, but GOP lawmakers rejected that proposal as well as a $1 billion workforce package Evers proposed last year that would have funded the program. 

Amundson says Child Care Counts has been a “lifeline” for providers and the Market Rate Survey provides the first hard data to “show that what our providers told us would happen is indeed happening.” 

“Affordability is another really pernicious issue that is affected by our failure to fund child care in the state of Wisconsin,” she said. “What we’re doing now is creating just a system of inequity. If you have the means, you will be able to pay for child care. If you do not have the means … then you are at the mercy of the kinds of increases that we’re seeing.” 

She argued child care providers are “doing everything they can” to keep rates as low as possible, but said paying “below substandard wages” for child care workers is unsustainable. 

Amundson said “the least we can do” is to re-estimate the subsidy amounts provided through Wisconsin Shares to match the market, noting that will take place as part of the biennial budget process about a year from now. 

“What that will not do, again, is help folks with their co-pays and it will not help folks that do not qualify for Wisconsin Shares,” she said. “So we need to look outside of our normal paths of funding … to start to fill the holes that we cannot fill with the normal reestimate process.” 

GOP state Sen. Van Wanggaard, R-Racine, knocked Evers following the release of yesterday’s report, saying the guy has spent $770 million in Child Care Counts to make child care more affordable and yesterday “admitted it wasn’t working.”

“Had he not vetoed the GOP child care package, we’d have more spots, and family of four would have $6,000 more to spend on child care,” Wanggaard said, referring to a package of child care bills Republican lawmakers took up last year.

See the release

— Wisconsin businesses are expected to collectively save about $206 million on worker’s compensation insurance in the coming year, state officials announced. 

The Department of Workforce Development and Office of the Commissioner of Insurance yesterday said worker’s compensation rates will decline 10.5% on average starting Oct. 1. This is the ninth year in a row that worker’s compensation premiums have declined in the state, according to the release. 

Insurance Commissioner Nathan Houdek said the falling rates reflect Wisconsin’s workplace safety practices. The annual premium adjustment is conducted by a committee of actuaries from members of the Wisconsin Compensation Rating Bureau, the release shows. 

“Employers doing business in Wisconsin can count on our competitive insurance marketplace for affordable, high-quality coverage for their business and employees,” Houdek said in the release. 

The announcement notes that while the overall rate is decreasing, impacts to specific businesses will depend on factors such as risk of injury. 

See the release

— The UW Health Lung Transplant Program has been ranked No. 1 in the country for both one-year survival rates and the time it takes to receive a transplant. 

UW Health recently announced the findings from the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, which rates transplant programs across the country. 

The SRTR’s latest report shows UW Health lung transplant recipients have a 94.67% chance of surviving one year following the procedure, compared to the national average of 88.21%. 

And the median wait time for a lung transplant in UW Health’s program is 12 days, less than half of the median time nationally, which is about a month. 

Dr. Daniel McCarthy, the program’s surgical director, says the top national ranking for both measures reflects the program’s “commitment to the most advanced surgical techniques” and innovative therapies. 

“Our program’s philosophy has always been better, not bigger,” McCarthy said. “I am privileged to work alongside a remarkable team and this distinction shows that everyone’s hard work has delivered the best possible outcomes for the patients we care so much about.” 

The Madison health system’s transplant team last year performed 56 lung transplants — the most the program has done in one year. 

See the release

Top headlines from the Health Care Report… 

— Dem Attorney General Josh Kaul is slamming the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 and former President Trump’s stance on the Affordable Care Act as threats to health care access. 

For more of the most relevant health care news, reports on groundbreaking research in Wisconsin, links to top stories and more, sign up today for the free daily Health Care Report from WisPolitics and WisBusiness.com.

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MANAGEMENT 

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MANUFACTURING 

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MEDIA 

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REAL ESTATE 

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REGULATION 

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