Senate approves DiMario’s bill to remove restrictions on child care assistance recipients

 

STATE HOUSE — The Senate today voted to approve Sen. Alana M. DiMario’s bill to allow more qualified Rhode Islanders to receive child care assistance by removing burdensome requirements that recipients cooperate with the Office of Child Support Services to establish paternity and enforce child support orders for children receiving child care assistance.

Many parents do not want to establish paternity or enforce a child support order because they have good reasons to not engage with an absent parent. For example, it may be unsafe to have this person in their life and the requirement to establish paternity or enforce a child support order may force them to choose between putting their family at risk or forgoing the child care assistance they would otherwise qualify for,” said Senator DiMario (D-Dist. 36, Narragansett, North Kingstown, New Shoreham). “Removing these requirements and providing high quality child care to those who qualify, no strings attached, will take an unnecessary burden off of families who need assistance and allow these parents the choice to continue their education or enter the workforce.”

This legislation (2024-S 2459) would remove the current requirement that the parents or caretakers applying to the Department of Human Services for child care assistance cooperate in establishing paternity and in enforcing child support orders for any children they are applying for assistance for. Under this legislation, they would still be able to choose to use the Office of Child Support Services’ resources to establish parentage, a child support or medical order, or to enforce that order, but this would no longer be a condition to quality for child care assistance.

“Advocates have been working on this for years and we are thrilled to see the Senate advance Senator DiMario’s bill to repeal the burdensome Child Support Enforcement requirement from the RI Child Care Assistance Program,” said Leanne Barrett, senior policy analyst at Rhode Island KIDS COUNT and coordinator of the Right from the Start Campaign. “Only nine states impose this eligibility requirement for Child Care Assistance, which is not in place for any other early care and education program.”

Said Senator DiMario, “These requirements limit workforce participation by preventing Rhode Islanders who would otherwise qualify for child care assistance from receiving it. Ironically, this workforce shortage is especially acute in the child care industry, where managers tell us they consistently lose employees who cannot afford child care themselves and are unable to claim the subsidies they qualify for because of the requirement to cooporate in establishing paternity and enforcing child support orders.”

The bill now heads to the House for consideration where Rep. Grace Diaz (D-Dist. 11, Providence) has introduced companion legislation (2024-H 7122).

 

 

The State Department is issuing a worldwide threat over violence against the LGBTQ+ community. As Pride Month approaches, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said members of the community "continue to face insidious forms of stigma and discrimination." The department advises U.S. citizens overseas to "exercise increased caution" because of the potential for foreign terrorist organization-inspired violence against people and events.        Aid is moving into the Gaza Strip today on a temporary pier constructed by the U.S. military. The pier is part of an effort to get supplies into the war shattered region where hundreds of thousands face hunger and a humanitarian crisis. The area has seen heavy fighting ever since the October 7th attack on Israel by the Palestinian militant group Hamas.        A man is under arrest for allegedly slugging actor Steve Buscemi [[ boo-SHEM-ee ]] earlier this month. Cops say 50-year-old Clifton Williams, who's homeless, punched the actor in an unprovoked attack as he was walking on a Manhattan street last week. The NYPD said they identified Williams from surveillance video. Buscemi was left with a black eye and swollen cheek and has not yet commented on the incident.        Tempers flared at a House hearing Thursday after Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene attacked the appearance of Democrat Jasmine Crockett. The House Oversight Committee was debating whether to hold Attorney General Merrick Garland in contempt of Congress when Greene and Crockett began arguing, and Greene said "I think your fake eyelashes are messing up what you're reading." Crockett later implied that Greene had a "bleach blonde bad built butch body."        Frontier Airlines will stop charging fees for customers to change flights. The company announced the change as part of a pricing model overhaul. The budget airline is known for bringing in customers with low base fares and charging for everything else. But with the Biden administration beginning stricter rules for "junk fees," Frontier will now begin offering packages that include those add-ons instead.        The NHL's Stanley Cup Playoffs feature two games tonight. In the East, the Florida Panthers will attempt to eliminate the Bruins in Boston in game six of their series. The Panthers hold a three games to two lead. In the West, the Colorado Avalanche will look to avoid elimination against the Dallas Stars in game six