October 23, 1997


Child Care Conference

The President and First Lady Host the First-Ever White House Conference on Child Care

[T]he American dream has represented a compact that those who work hard and play by the rules should be able to build better lives for themselves and for their children. In this time, and even more into the future, child care that is too expensive, unsafe or unavailable will be a very stubborn obstacle to realizing that dream. So let us commit ourselves to clearing the obstacle, to helping parents fulfill their most sacred duty, to keeping the American Dream alive for them and, most important, for their children."

President Clinton,
October 23, 1997

Today, the President and First Lady are hosting the first-ever White House Conference on Child Care. The day-long conference will address the need that America's parents have for safe, affordable child care for their children. Millions of Americans, struggling to be both good parents and good workers, rely on child care and after-school programs to care for their children for part of each day. Exploring the roles of both the public and private sectors, the Conference is intended to begin a dialogue on three of the most pressing child care issues -- availability, affordability, and assuring safety and quality.

PRESIDENT CLINTON ANNOUNCES NEW CHILD CARE POLICY INITIATIVES

Today the President announced his intention to develop a child care initiative as a part of his next budget proposal. As he said, "[O]ur administration will develop a plan to be unveiled at the next State of the Union to improve access and affordability, and to help assure the safety of child care in America." In addition, the President is:

BUILDING ON THE PRESIDENT'S COMMITMENT TO STRENGTHENING CHILD CARE

This Conference builds on the President's commitment to strengthening America's working families. Part of this effort includes the Administration's work to improve and increase funding for child care. Because of the President's leadership: federal funding for child care has increased by nearly 70%; the 1996 welfare reform law increased child care funding by $4 billion over six years; the Healthy Child Care America Initiative is ensuring that children in child care are in safe and healthy environments; and Head Start funding has increased by 43% so that nearly 800,000 children are now being served.

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