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Helen Blank, Director of Child Care and Early Learning

Helen Blank is Director of Child Care and Early Learning, working on child care and early education issues, at the National Women's Law Center.

Previously Ms. Blank served 24 years as the director of the Child Care and Development Division at the Children's Defense Fund. While at the Children's Defense Fund, Ms. Blank spearheaded a variety of efforts for improved early learning legislation. In an effort to pass the Act for Better Child Care, the first comprehensive federal child care legislation, she organized the Alliance for Better Child Care. Additionally she developed a guide for the implementation of the legislation that was enacted, the Child Care and Development Block Grant, that was widely used by state policymakers and child care leaders. In 1991, she led an effective campaign to convince the Bush administration to issue regulations for the Child Care and Development Block Grant that allowed states to use the new federal funds in the best interests of children. She was also a leader in efforts to expand and improve the child care provisions in welfare reform, subsequently developing a guide to assist states in implementing the provisions. In addition, she created the Child Care Now! Campaign, an ongoing initiative, which attempts to focus attention on early care and education.

She has authored and co-authored numerous major studies and reports on state child care policies including A Center Piece of the Child Care Puzzle; Providing Prekindergarten in Child Care Centers; Getting Organized: Unionizing Home-Based Child Care Providers; Close to Home: State Strategies to Strengthen and Support Family, Friend and Neighbor Care; In Their Own Voices: Parents and Providers Struggling with Child Care Cuts; Working Together for Children: Head Start and Child Care Partnerships; Seeds of Success: Pre-Kindergarten Initiatives; and A Fragile Foundation: State Child Care Assistance Policies, and numerous articles and papers on child care policies.

While at CDF, she created and led the Emerging Leaders Program for up and coming leaders in early care and education and at the National Women's Law Center co-directs PLAN, the Progressive Leadership and Advocacy Network for emerging leaders focusing on issues affecting low-income women and their families.

Prior to her work at the Children's Defense Fund, she spent two years at the Child Welfare League of America where she was instrumental in the development of child welfare reform legislation. Working with the National Child Nutrition Project, she directed a model food stamp outreach campaign in the Washington Metropolitan area that increased food stamp participation, and resulted in major improvements in the administration of the program in several local jurisdictions. In addition, she helped advocate for replication of this campaign in a number of states.

Ms. Blank is a member of Teach for America's Early Childhood Advisory Board, the T.E.A.C.H. Early Childhood Advisory Committee, the Child Care Food Program Sponsors' Forum, and the Advisory Board for LISC, the Local Initiative Support Corporation.

Ms. Blank has a bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan and a Master's Degree in Urban Planning from Hunter College of the City University of New York.

My Take

Child Care Needs To Be On the Agenda

Posted by Helen Blank, Director of Child Care and Early Learning | Posted on: October 02, 2012 at 04:02 pm

Last week, I was fortunate to have the opportunity to speak on a panel sponsored by the New America Foundation on Child Care Issues and the Presidential Election. I wanted to share some of those remarks. For the full remarks and for a video of the panel, click here.

Throughout my long career in child care advocacy, I have always heard that it is not the right time for children and families and we don’t have enough money to do what is right. That should not be the starting point for this discussion. For more low-income children to be in the high-quality early childhood settings that we know will improve their chances for better life outcomes, there must be increased investments to support children, parents, early childhood educators, and child care programs – and that is not impossible.

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Child Care: It’s Time to Talk About It

Posted by Helen Blank, Director of Child Care and Early Learning | Posted on: August 02, 2012 at 03:50 pm

In the past two weeks, several Washington Post articles have raised an issue that has not been the focus of a national political campaign since 1988—child care. It should be a top topic of the campaign debate because it is a basic support for millions of American families and because it is closely connected to the most pressing issues on the agenda today—jobs, the economy, and our nation’s budget priorities.

All families, regardless of income, struggle to find safe and supportive child care. Because the United States is one of only six countries that does not offer paid parental leave (PDF), many parents must start their search for child care soon after their babies arrive—or even before. Ask any parent what that search is like, and they will typically talk about how long the waiting lists are for a slot in a child care program, especially for infants and toddlers, and what limited choices they have in their neighborhoods for high-quality child care. Their stories are frustratingly similar.

Parents shoulder most of the burden for their child care costs—about 60 percent of child care is covered by parent fees. The private sector barely kicks in with about one percent of the support.

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Help Us Put Child Care on the Map

Posted by Helen Blank, Director of Child Care and Early Learning | Posted on: May 09, 2012 at 03:14 pm

When policymakers formulate their agenda priorities, whose interests are at the forefront of their minds?

Put Child Care on the Map!

Help put child care on the map!
Join the initiative - Register for
the kickoff conference call on
Thursday, May 17 at 2:00 p.m. Eastern!
Register Now

It is hard to remember that even though access to good quality child care is something that you and I spend a lot of time working on and advocating for, not everyone does - including our policymakers. And unfortunately, not all of us have strong relationships with the people that vote on critical policies like child care that affect women, children, and families.

We want to change that – and we need you! Join our new initiative: Putting Child Care on the Map.

Over the next year, with your help, we plan to cover a lot of ground to make sure Members of Congress hear about child care while they’re in their state and district offices. We’ll be working with advocates nationwide who know first-hand that child care matters in order to break through the political noise. We’ll put child care on the map for Congress – and then we’ll put it on our OWN map, to track our successes!

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Ensuring Mothers Have Access to High-Quality Affordable Child Care is What We Should Be Talking About

Posted by Helen Blank, Director of Child Care and Early Learning | Posted on: April 16, 2012 at 05:27 pm

The recent media clamor over moms working outside the home and stay-at-home moms threatens to overshadow any serious discussion about policies that could help the millions of mothers who need to work to support their families — such as policies that expand the availability of affordable, high-quality child care. After years of being largely ignored, child care has finally started to get some attention in the media. Yet this increased attention has not yet translated into significant new investments in child care. In fact, budget proposals currently under debate could slash child care funding and other essential supports for women and their families.

Child care deserves even more discussion in the media and more action by policy makers because of its importance to the well-being of mothers and their children. It not only helps mothers go to school or work to earn the education and income they need to support their families, but it can also provide young children with the early education experiences they need to succeed in school and in life and contribute to our nation's economy in the future.

Yet, with the cost of center care for a one-year-old exceeding the cost of public college tuition in about two-thirds of the states, high-quality child care options remain out of reach for most families.

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Early Learning Challenge Grantees and Child Care Assistance Policies

Posted by Helen Blank, Director of Child Care and Early Learning | Posted on: December 21, 2011 at 11:41 am

Last week the winners of the first round of the Early Learning Challenge grant competition were announced.

The 9 states selected to receive the grant awards (California, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Ohio, Rhode Island, and Washington) have laid out comprehensive, collaborative strategies to achieve stronger early learning systems that increase low-income children’s access to high-quality early care and education.

We hope that the states’ efforts will include steps to address continuing gaps in their child care assistance policies. Because according to our analysis of data from our recent report, many of these states are falling short in providing the help low-income families need to afford reliable, high-quality care. Be sure to check out the highlights of our analysis here!

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