CT child care workers slated to receive $1,000 bonuses

Gov. Ned Lamont announced Wednesday, Oct. 5  he would provide $1,000 “appreciation bonus payments” next month to thousands of child care workers to bolster an industry in crisis.

But, according to the Legislature’s top-ranking budget leaders, the $70 million lawmakers allocated was to give workers ongoing raises, not a one-time bump this fall.

“Child care staff work consistently to provide critically needed care to ensure that children are safe and their parents and guardians have the support necessary to go to work,” Lamont said. “They are an essential part of our economy and help make Connecticut the most family-friendly state in the country. We need to support this important industry that is vital to families, the workplace and society.”

The governor added that these bonuses — which are $1,000 for full-timers and $400 for part-timers — were created particularly to show gratitude for the job child care workers did during the height of the coronavirus pandemic.

Beth Bye, Lamont’s commissioner of the Office of Early Childhood, said the bonuses also would help stabilize an industry in which many earn close to minimum wage, which currently is $14 per hour.

This wouldn’t be the first time the Legislature awarded state funding to a government-regulated industry to boost compensation for largely for private-sector employees. The state also has appropriated funds to boost pay at nursing homes and many types of community-based social service agencies.

Bye said child care services will be notified by email soon about the program. Program operators will have to apply for the funds, and those eligible will receive the money next month, which they then must distribute as bonuses to their workers.

“They’re doing really high-value work, and they’re really not compensated, and we need to hold onto those that we can,” she added.

The co-chairs of the legislature’s Appropriations Committee, Rep. Toni E. Walker, D-New Haven and Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, agree with Lamont and Bye on most things.

The child care industry is in crisis, its workers make too little, and readily available care is crucial for the state’s economic future, the budget leaders said.

Where they disagree, though, is whether one-time bonuses are a more effective response than ongoing raises. And, more importantly, they also question whether bonuses are what the full House and Senate envisioned when they approved $70 million for “wage support” as part of the $24.2 billion state budget adopted last May.

Lawmakers wanted to boost weekly compensation so child care professionals “can maintain themselves, so we don’t end up losing these value slots,” Walker said. “It’s not a one-shot deal.”

“I don’t know what one-time payments do,” Osten said. “They don’t provide long-term change, and that’s what we’re looking for.”

House Republican Leader Vincent J. Candelora of North Branford said he believes the legislative intent behind the $70 million was clear, and it was not for the Democratic governor to provide one-time bonuses around Election Day.

“I think it’s a dangerous slippery slope that this governor continues to push,” Candelora said.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob Stefanowski also saw election politics at work.

“While day-care workers deserve to be well compensated, Gov. Lamont’s timing is obvious,” he said.

Lamont faced some unpleasant headlines earlier this week involving pandemic-related bonuses.

State Comptroller Natalie Braswell announced Monday her office would review at least 248,000 applications from private-sector workers seeking pandemic bonuses ranging from $200 to $1,000. The program, which got $30 million from Lamont and the legislature in May, is badly underfunded, and grants are expected to be significantly reduced unless more resources are added. The governor hasn’t said yet whether he will do that.

And on Wednesday, the coalition representing more than 40,000 unionized state employees announced it would seek arbitration because it hadn’t reached a deal with the governor’s budget office on special pandemic pay for its members.

“Gov. Lamont is doing what the people of Connecticut elected him to do, govern,” said Jake Lewis, spokesman for his reelection campaign. “His fiscal management over the last four years is why we’ve been able to cut taxes statewide, pay down debt and put money in the pockets of hard-working child care workers, who are so key to creating an economy where businesses and families can grow and thrive.”

Merrill Gay, executive director of the Connecticut Early Childhood Alliance, didn’t weigh in on how the $70 million should be used to assist child care workers. But he agreed with all state officials that the industry is in crisis and that government should help to stabilize it.

Many child care workers now possess bachelor’s degrees, Gay said, and services routinely are losing those staffers to school systems, where they can secure teaching assistant jobs.

Connecticut currently has one licensed slot for infant and toddler care for every child younger than 3, Gay said, adding that this represents a shortage of roughly 45,000 program slots.

CSEA-SEIU Local 2001 applauded the investment in child care workers but also said more needs to be done. About 2,000 members of Local 2001 are employed through the CT Care 4 Kids program, a partnership between the state and various child care services.

“There’s no surprise that due to a lack of pay, affordable and accessible health care and no retirement security, we’ve seen nearly 30% of providers leave the industry for higher paying jobs over the last 3 years,” said union spokeswoman Drew Stoner. “We need Gov. Lamont to take additional bold action that respects the providers, assists the parents and uplifts the children that are desperate for affordable, accessible and quality child care.”

 

The Journal occasionally will offer articles from CTMirror.org, a source of nonprofit journalism and a partner with The Lakeville Journal.

Latest News

Living art takes center stage in the Berkshires

Contemporary chamber musicians, HUB, performing at The Clark.

D.H. Callahan

Northwestern Massachusetts may sometimes feel remote, but last weekend it felt like the center of the contemporary art world.

Within 15 miles of each other, MASS MoCA in North Adams and the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown showcased not only their renowned historic collections, but an impressive range of living artists pushing boundaries in technology, identity and sound.

Keep ReadingShow less
Persistently amplifying women’s voices

Francesca Donner, founder and editor of The Persistent. Subscribe at thepersistent.com.

Aly Morrissey

Francesca Donner pours a cup of tea in the cozy library of Troutbeck’s Manor House in Amenia, likely a habit she picked up during her formative years in the United Kingdom. Flanked by old books and a roaring fire, Donner feels at home in the quiet room, where she spends much of her time working as founder, editor and CEO of The Persistent, a journalism platform created to amplify women’s voices.

Although her parents are American and she spent her earliest years in New York City and Litchfield County — even attending Washington Montessori School as a preschooler — Donner moved to England at around five years old and completed most of her education there. Her accent still bears the imprint of what she describes as a traditional English schooling.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jarrett Porter on the enduring power of Schubert’s ‘Winterreise’
Baritone Jarrett Porter to perform Schubert’s “Winterreise”
Tim Gersten

On March 7, Berkshire Opera Festival will bring “Winterreise” to Studio E at Tanglewood’s Linde Center for Music and Learning, with baritone Jarrett Porter and BOF Artistic Director and pianist Brian Garman performing Franz Schubert’s haunting 24-song setting of poems by Wilhelm Müller.

A rejected lover. A frozen landscape. A mind unraveling in real time. Nearly 200 years after its premiere, “Winterreise” remains unnervingly current in its psychological portrait of isolation, heartbreak and existential drift.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

A grand finale for Crescendo’s 22nd season

Christine Gevert, artistic director, brings together international and local musicians for a season of rare works.

Stephen Potter

Crescendo, the Lakeville-based nonprofit specializing in early and rarely performed classical music, will close its 22nd season with a slate of spring concerts featuring international performers, local musicians and works by pioneering composers from the Baroque era to the 20th century.

Christine Gevert, the organization’s artistic director, has gathered international vocal and instrumental talent, blending it with local voices to provide Berkshire audiences with rare musical treats.

Keep ReadingShow less

Leopold Week honors land and legacy

Leopold Week honors land and legacy

Aldo Leopold in 1942, seated at his desk examining a gray partridge specimen.

Robert C. Oetking

In his 1949 seminal work, “A Sand County Almanac,” Aldo Leopold, regarded by many conservationists as the father of wildlife ecology and modern conservation, wrote, “There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot.” Leopold was a forester, philosopher, conservationist, educator, writer and outdoor enthusiast.

Originally published by Oxford University Press, “A Sand County Almanac” has sold 2 million copies and been translated into 15 languages. On Sunday, March 8, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Norfolk Library, the public is invited to a community reading of selections from the book followed by a moderated discussion with Steve Dunsky, director of “Green Fire,” an Emmy Award-winning documentary film exploring the origins of Leopold’s “land ethic.” Similar reading events take place each year across the country during “Leopold Week” in early March. Planning for this Litchfield County reading began when the Norfolk Library received a grant from the Aldo Leopold Foundation, which provided copies of “A Sand County Almanac” to distribute during the event.

Keep ReadingShow less

Erica Child Prud’homme

Erica Child Prud’homme

WEST CORNWALL — Erica Child Prud’homme died peacefully in her sleep on Jan. 9, 2026, at home in West Cornwall, Connecticut, at 93.

Erica was born on April 27, 1932, in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, the eldest of three children of Charles and Fredericka Child. With her siblings Rachel and Jonathan, Erica was raised in Lumberville, a town in the creative enclave of Bucks County where she began to sketch and paint as a child.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.