At what point do we admit that Tri-Share is not successful? As @ehaspel.bsky.social writes, "I don’t mind the concept that Tri-Share is a policy laboratory — but if that’s the case, there’s a cost to continuing with an ineffective experiment.” familyfrontier.substack.com/p/challengin...
Posts by Elliot Haspel
Every word of this from @ehaspel.bsky.social
The letters appear to have been written quickly. Requests for documents repeatedly refer to "Minnesota" in letters addressed to other states.
www.axios.com/2026/01/07/t...
I appreciate this breakdown of "what fresh hell is this?" from @ehaspel.bsky.social familyfrontier.substack.com/p/the-new-ye...
Exciting news from New Mexico, proving that states continue to innovate in the face of the federal government's decades of inaction on childcare. Don't let anyone tell you there isn't nationwide demand for childcare as a public good. shorturl.at/tTENi
State and local policymakers looking to increase child care affordability, supply, and compensation must continue expanding public funding. Tri-Share does not build supply or substantively improve wages and benefits, making it a poor solution to the child care crisis. tcf.org/content/comm...
Everyone having a sportsbook in their pocket is not, it turns out, a good idea.
familyfrontier.substack.com/p/unfettered...
"Childcare undergirds everything we care about as Americans." - Great conversation between @lbilik.bsky.social and @ehaspel.bsky.social in today's Fireside Stacks.
www.firesidestacks.com/p/raising-a-...
It's publication day for Raising a Nation! Get it on Amazon, Bookshop, or wherever you get your books!
www.amazon.com/dp/0197799299/
I have a piece out in @jacobinmag.bsky.social today, adapted from my new book Raising a Nation, on why good child care is about far more than just the economy-- it's about the very health of our communities and society.
jacobin.com/2025/08/chil...
Also look at this screen. Look at our roster of experts! If you want to understand what is going on with the economy and with policy you need to attend @rooseveltinstitute.org events and read @rooseveltinstitute.org papers.
Today, the think tank Capita launched our "Unifying Family Policy" series w/the first three interlinked policy briefs in a cumulative effort to forge a family policy agenda responsive to the forces that will shape family life in years to come. (Series intro & links here: capita.org/a-unified-fa... )
Today, the think tank Capita launched our "Unifying Family Policy" series w/the first three interlinked policy briefs in a cumulative effort to forge a family policy agenda responsive to the forces that will shape family life in years to come. (Series intro & links here: capita.org/a-unified-fa... )
Excited to share the first media coverage of my new book, "Raising a Nation," from @jackiemader.bsky.social! The book drops August 11th and can be pre-ordered here: www.amazon.com/dp/0197799299/.
hechingerreport.org/why-american...
Parents and providers know what they need in a childcare system: something simple & safe where all kids have a high quality spot. We worked with Community Change on a new paper w/ research rooted in conversations with stakeholders about these simple demands.
Childcare in America is broken—expensive, scarce, & treated like a private problem rather than a public priority.
@ehaspel.bsky.social & Rebecca Gale on how the US has failed to treat childcare as the essential infrastructure it is #fixingchildcare 👇 www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025...
I co wrote a piece, via @newamerica.org’s Better Life Lab, for @theguardian.com about America’s surprising lack of a mass social movement demanding major child care reform— www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/11/chil...
Quote with The rising market share of investor-backed childcare chains is not an isolated phenomenon; it is part and parcel of the broader financialization of human services, with investor activity ranging from nursing homes to autism service providers to emergency rooms to prisons. This financialization is most notably marked by the influence of private equity firms, which also exert political power to protect their interests—interests that are not always aligned with what is best for children, parents, staff, communities, and the country writ large. Most of these sectors are heavily dependent on government funding, meaning that this misalignment can result in private investment entities leeching off public money while also harming the end users.
A private equity-backed company sent letters to childcare programs in the Midwest asking, “Have you ever considered how you might transition your business to a new owner?”
A fitting title for @ehaspel.bsky.social's brief on private equity ownership in childcare. rooseveltinstitute.org/public...
And those that choose not to massively cut SNAP and Medicaid will have to find the money elsewhere in their budgets. I've been reporting on state childcare programs recently and everyone expects unrelated things like that to get deeply slashed if these benefit cuts go through.
More childcare providers are retiring—& without a plan, families face fewer and riskier options.
@ehaspel.bsky.social breaks down his new brief which explores how public policy can support ownership transitions that serve the public good #fixingchildcare familyfrontier.substack.com/p/who-a-chil...
Quote from the Roosevelt Institute discussing the need for publicly supported ownership transition models in the childcare sector, emphasizing societal benefits and diverse, high-quality options.
📉 Childcare is a broken market—and it’s failing families, providers, and communities alike.
@ehaspel.bsky.social explores how public intervention isn’t optional, but essential. #fixingchildcare rooseveltinstitute.org/publications...
One reason private equity-backed child care chains continue to expand is that there is no one else for independent program owners to sell to. In a new brief for @rooseveltinstitute.org, I look at public sector solutions that can put kids & fam's over profit.
rooseveltinstitute.org/publications...
Most of us probably know intuitively that private equity & investor-backed chains should have no place in the care & education of young children. Grateful for this excellent brief from @ehaspel.bsky.social that gets into the weeds of WHY & HOW we should guard against corporate capture of childcare.
Local, state, and the federal government must develop alternate ownership transfer mechanisms in childcare as a bulwark against profit-maximizing financialization and as an affirmative good for building a family-friendly and family-centered care system and policy framework.
NEW: Investor-backed chains are quietly taking over childcare—deepening inequality & shrinking access.
In a new brief, @ehaspel.bsky.social outlines how public tools can shift power back to families & communities. #fixingchildcare rooseveltinstitute.org/publications...
It's refreshing that these people aren't using a pretext of concern over the program's rollout to scuttle it. The move is transparently about the wishes of the very wealthy over the will of the voters. You can dislike Preschool for All & still see that this is bad: actionnetwork.org/letters/no-o...
In Oregon, the Democratic governor and Dem state senators are trying a cloak-and-dagger maneuver in the final days of session to pre-empt a locality (Portland area) from collecting a tax that its voters overwhelmingly passed to support universal pre-K.
familyfrontier.substack.com/p/oregon-is-...