May 26, 2026 | Issue #20

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When Child Care Dollars Don’t Reach Families, Everyone Pays the Price


By Denyne Micheletti, CEO, Thriving Families California Foundation


After a week of digesting what was included in California’s 2026–27 May Revision, one thing has become increasingly clear: the proposal sends a troubling message to working families, community-based child care partners and nonprofits, employers, and the workforce that depends on stable child care. Instead of strengthening the infrastructure families rely upon, the proposal appears to shift limited resources from one struggling part of the system to another.


At a time when more than 1.8 million eligible California children still lack access to subsidized child care, the May Revision proposes eliminating nearly 6,000 child care voucher slots statewide while also allowing unspent voucher funding to be redirected into other parts of the system.


That should concern every policymaker, taxpayer, and employer in California.


This moment should have been an opportunity to modernize outdated systems, strengthen local delivery infrastructure, and ensure that funding already approved by the Legislature actually reaches eligible working families in real time. Instead, many of the proposals released thus far raise serious concerns that California is unintentionally weakening the very community-based network responsible for helping families access care in the first place.


While the Administration has proposed changes framed as increases to administrative funding, many Alternative Payment Program (APP) agencies report the opposite operational reality. Because portions of the current baseline operational funding structure are not fully incorporated into the new methodology, agencies across California are projecting substantial shortfalls in the funding they rely upon to support enrollment staff, family support specialists, provider payment systems, eligibility workers, compliance operations, and fiscal oversight.


These are not abstract administrative functions. These are the people helping families find child care so they can work. These are the staff helping parents navigate unstable work schedules, homelessness, transportation barriers, domestic violence situations, and economic hardship while trying to maintain stability for their children.


Under the current proposal, some agencies warn they may be forced to reduce staffing or dramatically increase caseloads for family support specialists to unsustainable levels — in some cases approaching one staff member for every 250 families. That is not family-centered infrastructure. That is crisis management.


The consequences extend far beyond individual families. Child care is workforce infrastructure. When parents lose access to flexible voucher-based care, employers experience increased absenteeism, staffing shortages, workforce instability, reduced productivity, and greater difficulty retaining employees. This is especially true in industries dependent on nontraditional-hour workers, including health care, hospitality, agriculture, retail, and service sectors.


At the same time, California continues to force families to navigate fragmented bureaucracies for child care, housing assistance, food programs, mental health support, health services, and other basic needs. Families do not experience these challenges in isolation, and public policy should stop treating them that way.


California should instead be investing in a true “No Wrong Door” approach where struggling families can access coordinated support through trusted community-based organizations already embedded in local communities. Yet the May Revision appears to move in the opposite direction by expanding centralized bureaucracy while weakening the operational capacity of the nonprofits families turn to first.


This is not simply a debate about percentages or line items in a budget. It is a debate about whether funding approved annually by the Legislature will actually reach the children and working families it was intended to serve.

Community-based child care agencies have spent decades building relationships with families, providers, employers, schools, and counties. Weakening those organizations while expecting them to serve more families with fewer resources is not modernization — it is destabilization.


California should be focused on maximizing access to care, modernizing outdated systems, and ensuring every available child care dollar reaches families still waiting for help.


California State Budget, Legislature & The Capitol

California Budget Updates


To support our field keeping up with budget related information, TFC will host updates and information on our Budget Page. If you have information you would like to have hosted, click here.


2026 Budget Negotiations Process

The Governor released his May Revision to the 2026–27 state budget on Thursday, May 14, advancing his final proposal before budget negotiations shift to the Legislature. Lawmakers must act by June 15 to pass a budget, with a final deadline of June 29 for the Governor’s signature on all budget bills. The outcome will set California’s spending priorities for the 2026–27 fiscal year, beginning July 1, 2026.


Use this Excel document to track changes to child care program funding throughout the budget process, including the May Revision. It will be updated as our analysis continues and additional information becomes available.


Check TFC's Budget Page for timely updates, insights, and resources on the May Revise and ongoing budget process for the 2026-27 budget.


Upcoming Budget Hearings


Budget Hearing Recap: May 21, 2026 Senate Budget Subcommittee 3 on Health and Human Services - Child Care May Revise Proposals

Last Thursday, the Senate Budget Subcommittee 3 on Health and Human Services held a budget hearing on child care proposals in the Governor's May Revise. The hearing focused on how California is planning to spend, and proposed cuts to, funding for subsidized child care programs that help low-income families afford care while parents work, go to school, or participate in job training.


A major topic was the Governor’s proposal to eliminate nearly 6,800 child care spaces, largely from the voucher program that allows families the flexibility to choose their own child care provider. Chair Caroline Menjivar elevated the need to protect and expand child care spaces and questioned whether the real problem is that the state’s system is too slow and complicated to move funding where families are actually waiting for care. Much of the discussion centered on bureaucratic delays to enroll families and use funds in a timely manner, and whether the state should fix administrative problems instead of reducing access for families.


The hearing also covered trailer bill language proposals involving provider payment increases, funding for child care centers damaged by disasters, support funding for community-based organizations that administer vouchers and serve the needs of families, and updates to licensing and fraud-prevention rules.

Recent LAO Publications


The Rise of Remote Work: Effects on California's Labor Market


LAO upgrades revenue estimates by $25 billion


How Will the Changing Landscape Affect California’s Health Care System?


The 2026-27 Budget: K-12 Mandates


The 2026-27 Budget: Update on Local Control Funding Formula Costs



The 2026-27 Budget: Child Care and State Preschool

TFC's Highlighted Bills

SB 902 (Grayson) Childcare: Electronic signatures

Authorizes the use of electronic signatures in child care programs, aligning child care processes with longstanding practices already used in county-administered programs and everyday life.


Status: Referred to the Assembly Committee on Human Services and Assembly Judiciary Committee


Next Hearing: Either June 16 or June 30 @ 1:30 p.m. in the Assembly Human Services Committee


Click here to sign the SB 902 (Grayson) coalition support letter

  • 30+ organizations signed on in support


Click here for a template support letter


Have questions about this bill or the support materials? Please email mckenzie@thrivingfamilies-ca.org

AB 2314 (Rogers) "The Child Care Stability and Modernization Act"

Maximizes use of existing child care funds to serve families, ensuring dollars are spent efficiently to reduce delays and reach families waiting to receive care.


Status: Filed for Third Reading in the Assembly


Click here to sign the AB 2314 coalition support letter


Click here for a template support letter


\Have questions about this bill or the support materials? Please email mckenzie@thrivingfamilies-ca.org

SB 1110 (Becker) Reimaging Child Care to Better Serve Families & Providers

Stabilizes the foundation of subsidized child care to move California towards universal child care/single rate structure. 


Status: Held on the Senate Appropriations Suspense File


Click here for a template support letter


Have questions about this bill or the support materials? Please email JTerry@ccrcca.org.

SB 1051 (Menjivar) Emergency Child Care Bridge: No Wrong Door

Permits Bridge Navigators to submit referrals to county welfare agencies to approve vouchers for an eligible foster child as another trusted partner and strengthen the original intent of the Bridge program.


Status: Referred to the Assembly Committee on Human Services


Next Hearing: June 16 @ 1:30 p.m. (tentative)


Click here for a template support letter


Have questions about this bill or the support materials? Please email JTerry@ccrcca.org.

TFC's Featured Bill of the Week

AB 2314 (Rogers) "The Child Care Stability and Alignment Act of 2026"



Author: Assemblymember Rogers


Assemblymember Chris Rogers proudly serves California’s 2nd Assembly District, which encompasses Eureka, Arcata, and Santa Rosa. Before joining the State Assembly, Chris made a significant impact as a Santa Rosa City Councilmember and Mayor, where he led efforts in wildfire recovery, housing affordability, and environmental sustainability. Known for his collaborative leadership style, Chris has been instrumental in securing resources to support small businesses and protect vulnerable communities during challenging times.


Chris holds degrees from UC Santa Barbara and Sonoma State University, where he developed a passion for policymaking and community engagement. He brings this passion to the State Assembly, focusing on creating a modern and equitable rural economy, healthcare access, and driving climate action. A lifelong resident of Santa Rosa, Chris is dedicated to preserving Northern California's natural beauty while ensuring its residents a prosperous future.

Important Dates, Deadlines,

Hearings, and Bills

Dates & Deadlines:

  • May 26 - Last day to amend Assembly bills on the Assembly Floor prior to May 29.
  • May 26-29 - Floor Session only. No committee may meet for any purpose 
  • May 29 - Last day for each house to pass bills introduced in that house 


This Week's Hearings for TFC-Tracked Bills:

  • No hearings this week. This week is only floor session.


Legislative Resources:

  • See the tentative 2026-27 Legislative Calendar here.
  • Visit TFC's Legislation Page to find a comprehensive list of bills of interest.
  • Visit TFC's Budget Page for full budget bill details, as well as budget hearing video archive links.
  • Click here to view all the bills that the Assembly and Senate introduced this legislative year.
  • Click here to view legislative committee information, rules, and position letter deadlines.

Elections Information


Deadlines for the June 2, 2026 California Primary Election:

  • June 2 - ELECTION DAY
  • Polls are open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
  • Last day to vote by mail
  • June 9 - Deadline for all mail-in ballots to be received


The State General Election will be on Tuesday, November 3, 2026.


Secretary of State Website Resources:


Other Resources:

  • CalMatters 2026 Voting Guide
  • Who's running for election? All 80 California Assembly seats are up for reelection, as well as 20 Senate seats from even-numbered districts.
  • There are 8 current Senators terming out, which means there will be, at minimum, 8 new Senators elected to the CA Legislature in November 2026.
  • Termed out Democrats: Asm. Mike McGuire (District 2), Asm. Aisha Wahab (District 10), Asm. Anna Caballero (District 14), Asm. Ben Allen (District 24), Asm. Maria Elena Durazo (District 26), Asm. Tom Umberg (District 24)
  • Termed out Republicans: Sen. Shannon Grove (District 12), Sen. Brian Jones (District 40)
  • Are the districts different? California’s midterm congressional elections will be using redrawn maps. After Proposition 50 passed, the state redrew its district boundaries.
  • What propositions are on the ballot? See the six propositions that have qualified to be on the 2026 ballot here.

CalNonprofit: Meet the Candidate Webinars


Candidate Tom Steyer

Click here for the recording.


Candidate Chad Bianco

Click here for the recording.

Did You Know?

Child Care Q&A's


NOTE: If you have a question you would like answered or researched, please email.


Question: How much paperwork do families often have to complete just to enroll a child in care?


Answer: Families enrolling a child in care are often required to complete dozens of pages of forms, many of which must be printed, signed by hand, and submitted in person. For working parents—especially those juggling jobs, transportation, and appointments—these paper-only requirements can delay enrollment and make it harder to secure care when they need it most.


Allowing families to complete and submit forms electronically can remove unnecessary barriers and help children access care faster. SB 902 (Grayson) would allow electronic signatures on child care forms so families can complete the forms wherever they are at.

Federal Update

Updates on CCDF and Federal Proposed Rule Posted to TFC's Webpage


Click here to be directed to our website page that will be continually updated with the latest news. The newest update includes:

Doubling CCDBG Investments in FY27 Would Expand Care to More Than 870,000 Additional Children | CLASP

Increasing the total discretionary funding to $17.66 billion would expand subsidy access to more than 870,000 additional children. This added funding would be crucial to better reach and support families with low incomes who have never been able to fully utilize the program as the result of decades of insufficient funding.


In California, an additional $744,676,980 in CCDBG funding would result in an additional 98,364 children served.

Click here to read the most recent weekly federal update from the National Women's Law Center.


Federal Government Update 

Senate Republicans abruptly left Washington on Thursday without voting on a roughly $70 billion bill to fund immigration enforcement agencies, frustrated with the White House and at an impasse over whether to try to block a new $1.776 billion settlement fund to compensate Trump allies who believe they have been politically prosecuted.

 

Republicans had already abandoned part of the bill that provided $1 billion in security money for the White House complex and President Donald Trump’s ballroom amid backlash from members of their own party. But the settlement announced by the Justice Department this week prompted even more questions, spurring a push to limit the taxpayer dollars that some feared could go to Trump supporters who harmed law enforcement officers in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. More: GOP rift over Trump's $1.8B settlement fund delays immigration bill | AP News 

 

Congress is on recess next week. So that means we have another week of Members of Congress back home, and we need to urge them not to support funding for ICE and CBP. The Senate is expected to be back in session on June 1st. More: Children's Advocates to Congress: Additional Funding for DHS is a Cruel Misuse of Public Funding and a Direct Attack on Children and Families

⇒ Take Action: Tell Congress: Support Families - Not ICE (NWLC)

As a reminder, there are lots of resources you can use for digital and in person pushback to Members in the Not One More Dollar Resource Hub.


Administration Updates

  • HHS Proposes New Head Start Rule: The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) proposed rescinding wage and benefit requirements from the 2024 Head Start rule, which required that programs pay educators in a manner comparable to public school wages and provide related benefits, arguing this will restore flexibility, reduce administrative burden, and potentially yield $2.1 billion in annual cost savings for grantees. Public comments are due on or before June 11, 2026.
  • DEEP DIVE: Head Start Notice of Proposed Rule Making (EdCounsel)
  • We will circulate a template comment and sign-on letter ASAP.
  • ACF Final CCDF Rule Rolls Back Key 2024 Reforms: ACF published a final rule for the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) that is largely consistent with the proposed rule it released in January. The final rule eliminates the federal cap on family copayments at 7% of income, removes the requirement to pay providers based on enrollment (instead of attendance), and repeals the prospective payment requirement intended to stabilize provider cash flow. The rule will go into effect on July 13, 2026.
  • Trump Administration Finalizes Rule that Raises Costs for Families and Destabilizes Child Care System - National Women's Law Center 
  • ACF Releases New Guidance Highlighting CCDF and TANF Flexibilities for States: HHS released new guidance that encourages states to use existing flexibility under CCDF and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) to expand parent choice, including support for family, friend, and neighbor care (FFN) and faith-based providers in CCDF. HHS also distributed a letter to governors, encouraging states to transfer TANF funds to CCDF to expand child care access and ensure payment structures adequately account for married, two-parent families.
  • More here: ACF Announces Child Care Reform Package to Address Affordability, Expand Access, and Strengthen Parental Choice | The Administration for Children and Families 


Fraud Narrative

Thank you to so many of you who signed onto the letter led by the Child Care for Every Family Network (CCEFN), NWLC, National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), National Association for Family Child Care (NAFCC), MomsRising, and the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP).


Fraud should always be taken seriously and prosecuted when proven, and Minnesota has investigated and prosecuted fraud in the past. However, no credible evidence of current widespread or systemic fraud in the US child care system has been publicly presented. Investigations are ongoing, but broad funding disruptions are not an evidence-based response and harm children, families, and providers who are following the rules.

 

More:

 

⇒ Take Action: 

  • We’re still gathering signatures on our letter to the House HERE
  • This letter urges House members to reject a set of bills that Republicans have already advanced through the House Education and Workforce Committee. We will circulate this letter to the House if/when the bills come to the House floor for a vote.
  • SIGN ON HERE
  • Coalition and network partners invite local, state, and national groups to sign on to a letter to Congress opposing attacks on a broad range of federal funding in the name of so-called fraud.


Take Action

Most Viewed Bills of the Week:


1.H.R.4818 [118th] Treat and Reduce Obesity Act of 2023

2.H.R.3633 [119th] Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025

3.S.4487 [119th] Veterans Compensation Cost-of-Living Adjustment Act of 2026

4.H.R.1 [119th] An act to provide for reconciliation pursuant to title II of H. Con. Res. 14.

5.H.R.2853 [119th] Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025

6.H.R.22 [119th] SAVE Act

7.H.R.1346 [119th] Nationwide Consumer and Fuel Retailer Choice Act of 2025

8.S.3516 [118th] A bill to impose a fee on certain remittance transfers to fund border security.

9.H.R.7567 [119th] Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026

10.H.R.5269 [119th] RESULTS Act

R&R Network and Thriving Families CA Foundation 2026 Joint Annual Conference - Call for Presentations NOW OPEN! Submit before June 5th!

Call for Presentations NOW OPEN!

 

Submit a Workshop Proposal Today!

We invite you to submit a workshop proposal to this year's Joint Conference. Please see the 2026 Call for Presentations Announcement  for more information.

 

Please share this Call for Presentations email with others whose workshops would benefit conference attendees and in line with the guidelines and audience described in the document. 

 

Workshop proposals are due, Friday, June 5th.


2026 Conference

Save the Date and join your peers for an amazing 2026 Joint Conference!

After thoughtful consideration and reflection on participant and committee feedback, we will be moving to a 100% in-person format for 2026, rather than offering a hybrid option as in previous years. In-person gatherings continue to provide the highest levels of engagement, connection, and overall satisfaction—and we want to ensure the best possible experience for all attendees.


Over the past year, we also observed limited participation in the virtual offering. As a result, we’re focusing our efforts on delivering a dynamic, fully in-person event that maximizes learning, collaboration, and meaningful relationship-building.


To accommodate this shift, we are increasing overall in-person conference capacity.


We appreciate your understanding and partnership as we work to create an engaging and inclusive conference experience for all.


More details, including registration timelines, will be shared soon—we look forward to seeing you in person!


Visit the Conference Webpage for more information as it becomes available.

CDSS & CDE Upcoming Events

Early Childhood Policy Council Meeting May 27, 2026


The California Department of Education is pleased to announce the upcoming Early Childhood Policy Council Meeting on Wednesday, May 27, 2026, from 9 a.m. to noon Pacific Time. The full agenda for this meeting can be accessed here

l cover the topics listed below and will provide opportunities for public comment throughout:

  • Council May Revise Letter Discussion
  • Family Access and Federal Policy Subcommittee Discussion
  • Workforce Needs Subcommittee Discussion


Physical Meeting Information:
 

1000 G Street, Sacramento, CA 95814 

WestEd, 5th floor, Capitol Room 


Virtual Meeting Registration Information:

https://wested.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_952XQaINSP2-lIE2t0w3qg

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

CDSS & CDE Information & Updates

CDE: Eligibility and Priority Frequently Asked Questions


Attention: Executive Directors and Program Directors of All California State Preschool Programs and Other Interested Parties

The California Department of Education (CDE), Early Education Division (EED), has updated the Eligibility and Priority Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) web page which can be accessed at https://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/gs/em/eligandpriofaq.asp.

The FAQs are regarding eligibility and priorities for enrollment in California State Preschool Programs (CSPP). Current topics included are:

  • Transfers between General Childcare and CSPP
  • 24-Month Eligibility
  • Children with Exceptional Needs Eligibility and Priority
  • Pilot Counties
  • CSPP Neighborhood School Eligibility Based on Neighboring Elementary Schools Free or Reduced-Price Meals Status
  • Eligibility and Priority
  • Priority Order for Head Start Collaborative Programs

 

The Eligibility and Priority FAQs web page can be accessed from the Contractor Information Resources web page, found at https://www.cde.ca.gov/sp/cd/ci/.

RELEASED May 11, 2026: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-13: Fiscal Year 2026-27 Child Care and Development Support Initial Contract Award Allocations


The California Department of Social Services (CDSS) Child Care and Development Division (CCDD) has recently published the following document: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-13: 2026-27 CHILD CARE AND DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT INITIAL CONTRACT AWARD ALLOCATIONS


The purpose of this CCB is to inform child care and development contractors of Fiscal Year (FY) 2026-27 initial support contract allocations. Please note that award amounts are proposed, and any changes based on Budget Act enactment may be communicated in a forthcoming Budget Act amendment CCB. Contracts will be provided on a flow basis as soon as possible. Funding Terms and Conditions are located on the Contractor Resources webpage. CCB 26-13 Page Two Child Care and Development (CCD) Programs that applied and received approval for continued funding do not need to sign and return a CCD contract to provide services for FY 2026-27. By completing and returning the FY 2026-27 Continued and Expansion Funding Application (CEFA), a contractor indicates that it wishes to automatically renew its CCD contract for FY 2026-27 in accordance with all applicable federal and state laws, as well as all of the terms and conditions and Program Requirements that will be incorporated into the FY 2026-27 CCD contract. Local Planning Council contract holders are not required to submit a CEFA form and will not need to sign a contract and return it. See CCB 25-25 for additional information regarding contract renewal/expansion. 

RELEASED May 12, 2026: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-12: Fiscal Year 2026-27 (CAPP, CMAP, and CFCC) Voucher Based Child Care


The California Department of Social Services (CDSS) Child Care and Development Division (CCDD) has recently published the following document: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-12: FISCAL YEAR 2026-27 (CAPP, CMAP, AND CFCC) VOUCHER BASED CHILD CARE AND DEVELOPMENT INITIAL CONTRACT AWARD ALLOCATIONS

Purpose: The purpose of this Child Care Bulletin (CCB) is to inform voucher-based child care and development contractors of initial contract allocations for Fiscal Year (FY) 2026­-27.

  

If you have questions or need additional guidance regarding the information in this letter, please contact the Child Development Fiscal Services inbox at 

In partnership, ChildDevelopmentFiscal@dss.ca.gov. 

Sincerely,

RAYMOND ULIASSI, Chief 

Fiscal Forecasting Branch 

Finance and Accounting Division 

RELEASED May 11, 2026: CCB 26-11:

Fiscal Year 2026-27 Direct Service Child Care And Development Initial Contract Award Allocations


The California Department of Social Services (CDSS) Child Care and Development Division (CCDD) has recently published the following document: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-11: FISCAL YEAR 2026-27 DIRECT SERVICE CHILD CARE AND DEVELOPMENT INITIAL CONTRACT AWARD ALLOCATIONS

Purpose: The purpose of this Child Care Bulletin (CCB) is to inform direct service child care and development contractors of initial contract allocations for Fiscal Year (FY) 2026-27.

If you have questions or need additional guidance regarding the information in this letter, please contact the Child Development Fiscal Services inbox at 

In partnership, ChildDevelopmentFiscal@dss.ca.gov. 

Sincerely, 

RAYMOND ULIASSI, Chief 

Fiscal Forecasting Branch 

Finance and Accounting Division 

RELEASED May 11, 2026: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-10: FISCAL YEAR 2026-2027 CALIFORNIA WORK OPPORTUNITY AND RESPONSIBILITY TO KIDS INITIAL CONTRACT ALLOCATIONS

ATTENTION: CHILD CARE AND DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTORS (C2AP and C3AP)

The California Department of Social Services (CDSS) Child Care and Development Division (CCDD) has recently published the following document: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-10: FISCAL YEAR 2026-2027 CALIFORNIA WORK OPPORTUNITY AND RESPONSIBILITY TO KIDS INITIAL CONTRACT ALLOCATIONS

The purpose of this Child Care Bulletin is to provide child care and development contractors with an overview of the California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids Stages Two and Three initial contract allocations for Fiscal Year 2026-27.

  

If you have questions or need additional guidance regarding the information in this letter, please contact the Child Development Fiscal Services inbox at 

In partnership, ChildDevelopmentFiscal@dss.ca.gov. 

RAYMOND ULIASSI, Chief 

Fiscal Forecasting Branch 

Finance and Accounting Division 

RELEASED May 8, 2026: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-09: Expiration of the Coronavirus Disease Of 2019 (Covid-19) TrustLine Retroactive Payment Limits Temporary Waiver


The California Department of Social Services (CDSS) Child Care and Development Division (CCDD) has recently published the following document: Child Care Bulletin (CCB) 26-09: Expiration of the Coronavirus Disease Of 2019 (Covid-19) TrustLine Retroactive Payment Limits Temporary Waiver

 

The purpose of this Child Care Bulletin (CCB) is to provide guidance to counties and child care and development contractors regarding the expiration of the TrustLine Retroactive Payment Limits Temporary Waiver, effective February 28, 2023. The waiver was issued in response to the Coronavirus Disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, in accordance with the Governor's Executive Order N-45-20 dated April 4, 2020.

Social Media Spotlight

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We would love for you to tag us in your posts and use the hashtag #TFC2025

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On Our Reading List

HHS seeks to undo Biden-era Head Start reforms | K-12 Dive

A proposed rule issued last week seeks to roll back Head Start wage and benefit requirements approved during the Biden administration, according to a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services notice in the Federal Register.


...


In its May 12 notice of proposed rulemaking, HHS’ Administration for Children and Families, which oversees Head Start, called the wage and benefit requirements “costly and overly prescriptive.” 


ACF, under the Trump administration, “has determined that the wage and benefit requirements exceed the Head Start Act’s statutory requirements by restricting program flexibility and imposing a federal minimum wage that would likely exceed the Fair Labor Standards Act level,” the proposed rule said.


By full implementation in 2031, the 2024 rule is estimated to cost about $1.2 billion for the wage standards and $877 million for the benefits standards. Those expenses would lead to eliminating some 106,000 Head Start slots for children, according to the proposed rule.


ACF, in the proposed rule, called the rollback “in the best interest of Head Start programs, children, and families” to ensure that Head Start services can continue “for as many children and families as possible.” 


While HHS had considered trying to rescind the 2024 rule altogether, it ultimately decided to only seek pulling back the wage and benefit requirements. Other components in the 2024 rule that would stand include requirements for staff breaks, enhanced mental health supports for children, and various operational and educational practices. 


Public input on the proposed rule will be collected through June 11. A final rule would take effect 60 days after being published in the Federal Register.


Head Start, which celebrated its 60th anniversary last year, serves nearly 800,000 infants, toddlers and preschool children a year. Those eligible for Head Start include families living below the poverty line or experiencing homelessness, and children in foster care. 

Information & Updates

Happening This Week, May 25 - May 29, 2026: 


Monday, May 25th:

  • Memorial Day Holiday- TFC Office Closed
    

Tuesday, May 26th:

Wednesday, May 27th:

Thriving Families CA Foundation is committed to supporting our field with a coordinated calendar. Click here to see our current calendar of events. If you have an event to add, email us and it will be added.

The Weekly Good

An uplifting way to start the week, for those of us who need a break from the chaos that is our lives.

During this time where we are all stressed, it would be great to celebrate the positive. Each week we will celebrate everyday heroes, inspiring movements and great things happening in our field. 

Quick Links



- Join TFC Today!

- Legislative Information

-Job Announcements

-TFC Website

-Support TFC

May 2026 Monday Morning Update Sponsor

Kindersystems

May 2026 Featured Member Highlight
Stanislaus County Office of Education - Child & Family Services

The Stanislaus County Office of Education’s (SCOE) Child & Family Services (CFS) Division was established with the mission to provide the foundational resources and services children ages 0-5 need to become lifelong learners. CFS advances that goal every day through comprehensive early childhood education programs, as well as initiatives that empower parents and the 1,200 education professionals with whom they work to maximize their ability to help the region’s children thrive in the classroom and community.


Get to know them and the full scope of their work and how they are supporting the needs of family child care providers and families in Stanislaus county.

The Thriving Families CA (TFC) Foundation is dedicated to strengthening families via connections to child care and other essential services that are critical to breaking the cycle of poverty and achieving economic self-sufficiency. Our community-based programs and services are located in each of California’s 58 counties and are uniquely positioned to address the complex and evolving needs of underserved and marginalized populations. Every day, our membership verifies and provides subsidies for tens of thousands of impoverished working families to access child care needed to support employment and a robust workforce, as well as comprehensive wraparound supports—including food security, stable housing, transportation, mental health services, domestic violence intervention, home visiting, health care access, legal assistance, and immigration support. Learn more about our network of 70+ public and private community-based organizations here.

TFC Member Only Benefits


Not a member?

Find out how to join today!

TFC Weekly Member Connections via Zoom:

Our commitment to you is to have scheduled at least once per week a call wherein we can all connect. As questions arise, forward them to TFC so that we can address them on these calls. Look for a weekly email to register. Recording and Q&A will also be posted on the Member's Only page. 

We’re excited to introduce a new member benefit designed to support connection, learning, and shared success across our network—our Quarterly Case Management Roundtable.

This interactive series brings together professionals from across the field (via Zoom) to engage in meaningful conversations, exchange ideas, and strengthen practices that support families and communities.


Email for more information and registration.

Job Descriptions and Salary Information

TFC has collected more than 85 job descriptions from member agencies that you can view and use when you create your agency's next job posting!



Visit the Member's Only website to view today!

Best Practices

TFC has been working on Best Practices and policies to support you.



Visit the Member's Only website to view today!

TFC's 2025-26 Board of Directors

PRESIDENT

Rev. Gina Fromer, Ph.D.

GLIDE


VICE PRESIDENT

Michelle Graham

Children's Resource & Referral of Santa Barbara County 


SECRETARY

LaVera Smith

Supportive Services, Inc. Fresno


TREASURER

Beth Chiaro

Child Care Resource Center


PAST PRESIDENT

Rick Richardson

Child Development Associates


PUBLIC POLICY CHAIR

Phillip Warner

Children's Council of San Francisco


MEMBERSHIP CHAIR

Adonai Mack

Child Action, Inc.


MEMBERS AT LARGE

Teri Sedrick

North Coast Opportunities, Inc.


Jeanne Fridolfs

Napa County Office of Education


Joie Owen

Valley Oak Children's Services


Karen Marlatt

Valley Oak Children's Services 


Jessica Kranz

Go Kids, Inc.


Mike Michelon


Daniel Johnson 

Davis Street Community Center


Denyne Micheletti

TFC CEO


The representation of the TFC Foundation board spreads across all agency types and sizes, and represents voices from nearly every region in California.

Click Here to see.

DSS & CDE Updates



May 11, 2026

CCB 26-13:

Fiscal Year 2026-27 Child Care And Development Support Initial Contract Award Allocations


CCB 26-12:

Fiscal Year 2026-27 (CAPP, CMAP, and CFCC) Voucher Based Child Care


CCB 26-11:

Fiscal Year 2026-27 Direct Service Child Care And Development Initial Contract Award Allocations



CCB 26-10:

Fiscal Year 2026-2027 California Work Opportunity And Responsibility To Kids Initial Contract Allocations

May 8, 2026:

CCB 26-09: Expiration of the Coronavirus Disease Of 2019 (Covid-19) TrustLine Retroactive Payment Limits Temporary Waiver

April 24, 2026


CCB 26-08: IMPLEMENTATION OF ASSEMBLY BILL (AB) 753


April 13, 2026

CCB 26-07:

Guidance For Reporting Dual Language Learner Data

March 24, 2026:

CCB 24-22E: Erratum to California Resource and Referral Monitoring Tool Implementation


March 17, 2026
CCB 26-06: PROCESS FOR CONTRACTING AGENCIES TO MOVE FROM PROVISIONAL CONTRACT TO CLEAR CONTRACT STATUS

March 4, 2026


CCB 26-03: ELIGIBILITY AND ENROLLMENT FOR MIGRANT CHILD CARE AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS

Job Openings

Is Your Organization Hiring?

Post your job announcement here for thousands to see!

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Non-members will be charged a fee of $75.

Please email us your posting!


--Child Care Case Manager & Support Specialist

--Child Care Case Manager

--Teacher Aide

--Primary Care Teacher

--Maintenance/

Facility Technician

Glenn County Office of Education


Multiple Opportunities Available

CDA San Diego


Provider Specialist (Spanish Speaking)
Hively


Multiple Positions Open
4Cs of Sonoma County


Urgent Hire - Mental Health Associate - Los Angeles, CA 90041 - Indeed.com

California Children’s Academy



Advocacy Manager Catalyst Family Inc.


--Resource and Referral Specialist I

--Clerical Assistant – Front Desk

--Family Services Specialist I

--Provider Services Specialist I

Solano Family & Children's Services


Center Director

Early Development Services, Santa Barbara County


-Finance Director

-Center Director at Roosevelt

Davis Street


-Child Care Case Manager & Support Specialist

-Child Care Case Manager

Glenn County Office of Education


Family Advocate

YMCA of San Diego County


Pathways LA- Multiple Job Openings

Nutritional Aid, Child Care Provider Training Coordinator, Child Care Case Worker,

Preschool Associate Teacher, Child Care Professional Dev. Coach and Payment Processor

Of Interest

Childcare Providers Begin Receiving Measure C Funds


California’s Persistent Poverty Crisis: 2024 Rates Remain Alarmingly High


Experts Talk Costs and Supply in California’s Child Care


Apprenticeships Aimed at Boosting Child Care Careers Have Been Flourishing


Childcare Costs and the Shifting Economic Landscape: Investment Opportunities in a Post-Pandemic World


Field Happenings and Resources


Recognizing how our agencies continue to engage and communicate with families and providers.


Del Norte Child Care Council March Newsletter


4Cs of Alameda Current Newsletter

Upcoming Valley Oak Children's Service Events


4Cs Sonoma Upcoming Events


Connections for Children Upcoming Events



Hively Upcoming Events

Become a Monday 

Morning Update Partner! 

Our Monday Morning Update supports our Early Learning & Child Care field with timely information about what is going on in California and nationally; as well as dates to be aware and upcoming events. 


Our weekly Monday morning distribution is to nearly 10,000 federal and state local agencies, resource and referrals, contractors, legislators and their staffs', centers, parents, providers, state departments and advocates. 


To help support the continuation of this resource and or advertise in the Monday Morning Update, click HERE.


To advertise in the update, click here.


The Thriving Families CA Foundation is a non-profit organization (501(c)3), Taxpayer Identification Number is 03-0521444. Your generous donation is tax deductible.

Thank You to Our Generous 2024-25 Thriving Families CA Foundation Champions!


Thank you to the following Champions who stepped up in 2024-25, with funding to enhance our ability to serve the field. These agencies have made it possible for TFC to support our field with more tailored support of individual organizations, ability to pay for legal, advocacy and social media supports, enhanced regional trainings, improving data collection, and more.

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