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Opinion: Building a NYC Where No Family is Priced Out

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Opinion: Building a NYC Where No Family is Priced Out

“The next mayor’s top two priorities should be implementing free, universal preschool for all 3- and 4-year-olds and expanding access to affordable childcare to substantially lower costs.”

Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office

The city under the de Blasio administration invested heavily in expanding free pre-k and 3-k, major gaps in the system remain for families in need of infant and toddler care.

Families across New York City are struggling to keep up with skyrocketing costs of living. Even before the 2024 election, hundreds of thousands of families have voted with their feet, leading to the largest decline in the city’s under-20 population in a decade.

This exodus is a damning indictment of the failed economic record of the Adams administration. With Donald Trump in the White House for the next four years, there will be no federal relief, and it will be up to the city of New York to deliver the lower costs that working families deserve.

Child care costs are out of control. Parents are spending up to an estimated $28,000 annually per child on child care—and that’s assuming they can even find a child care spot. Put differently, a family earning the median for households with children will have to fork over as much as 43 percent of their income on childcare for an infant and a toddler. Thousands of kids are being denied the opportunity to attend prekindergarten, jeopardizing their educational and economic futures and forcing parents out of the workforce. 

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