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Subcommittee on Human Services

Parent Committee: Standing Committee on Health and Human Resources

Public Comments (HMS)

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Destiny on February 7, 2026 21:01
I am a single mother of two children, ages 7 and 3. My 7-year-old was diagnosed level 3, non-verbal autism at the age of 2. The father of my children provides no financial support. I have worked in childcare for 5 years and completed several trainings, certifications, and 3 of the 4 semesters of ACDS (Apprenticeship for Child Development Specialist). Having a son that was unable to communicate with me about the care he received is what drove me to work in childcare. While that was my initial reason for starting, I found a passion in educating young minds. However, when the cost of childcare takes such a large percentage of my pay- it makes me consider career changes for better financial opportunities. Childcare facilities have a large turnover rate in staffing- either from burnout or higher paying jobs. Our facility, like many others, has a staff shortage. If childcare centers around the state close - where will the working class send their children? This bill is vital to keep and bring in childcare teachers to ensure that our economy continues moving as it should.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Tonya Lambert on February 11, 2026 16:01
I strongly support HB 4067 – The Workforce Scholarship Act. Child care workers are essential to our state’s workforce and economy, yet many struggle to afford basic child care for their own children. By ensuring that any child care employee working at least 20 hours per week is eligible for a child care subsidy regardless of income, this bill helps make quality child care affordable for the very people who provide it. This support will: • Increase recruitment and retention of child care professionals by reducing a major financial burden they face. • Strengthen the child care workforce, which is critical as providers struggle with staffing shortages and closures.  • Improve access and affordability of child care for families across West Virginia. • Support broader economic participation, since reliable child care enables more parents to work. I urge the committee to advance this bill and help support families, workers, and early childhood education in our state.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Gilbert Smith on February 11, 2026 16:03
Childcare employment is critical to the success of working parents, especially those with limited or no access to flexible scheduling. Initiatives that facilitate the hiring and retaining of childcare employees have my full and unrelenting support, especially when the cost for such a program is so minor and critical to our public and professional wellbeing. Please consider passing this legislation for the positive impact it will have on working families.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Megan O’Neal on February 11, 2026 16:03
Hello! Thank you for taking the time to acknowledge the hard work of childcare workers and also acknowledging the expensiveness that also comes with it. Childcare costs is one of the main reasons why parents in our area decide to have one parent stay home while the other works extra. If that isn’t an option, unfortunately many families end up working solely to cover the bill of childcare.
  • As someone who worked in this field for many years and has also had three children go to childcare, I can say with my whole heart that when you find a good childcare you hold onto it. One of the main reasons why I stopped working in childcare was because it is so underpaid. And that is not on the programs themselves at all. Unfortunately childcares are struggling for funding as it is. The teachers can be some of the most wonderful and talented teachers around, but they still have bills to pay and unfortunately most of the time they don’t qualify for childcare payment assistances. Therefore, these teachers would benefit incredibly from their own children being offered scholarships. They spend so much time working with and caring for children in communities that don’t have access to consistent warm meals and love. They spend their hard earned money on classroom supplies, treats, and other classroom needs like diapers and wipes and have their own children to worry about as well. They are who so many of us trust our babies with in a world that is hard enough. Please see these workers and their hard work and understand that they deserve the world. They deserve to be able to do what they love and still be able to afford living as well.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Susan on February 11, 2026 16:08
This would help cover the cost of their own childcare expenses.  This would serve as an incentive for educators to remain in this field.  This support would show that we value our staff and would retain teachers long term
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Tiffany Gale on February 11, 2026 16:15

My name is Tiffany Gale, and I am a child care provider and member of the early childhood community in West Virginia. I am writing to express my strong support for House Bill 4067, which would allow employees of child care programs — including family child care homes — who work at least 20 hours per week to receive a child care subsidy for their own children, regardless of income.

This bill makes sense for our child care workforce. Many of the dedicated professionals who care for our children are parents themselves. Despite the importance of their work, child care employees are often paid low wages and struggle to afford care for their own children. This creates financial stress and barriers that make it harder to recruit and retain quality staff — a challenge that many providers, including myself, face every day.

By ensuring that child care workers can access subsidy support for their families, HB 4067 would help remove a critical barrier to workforce stability. It would:

  • Support recruitment and retention of qualified child care staff;

  • Recognize the value of early childhood professionals by supporting their own families;

  • Strengthen the overall child care system by helping keep more caregivers in the field.

I urge you to support this practical and compassionate legislation. Helping child care workers afford care for their own children is not only fair — it benefits families, children, and our entire early childhood system.

Thank you for your consideration.

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Chris Gale on February 11, 2026 16:16

My name is Chris Gale, and I am writing to support House Bill 4067, which would allow employees working 20 hours or more per week in licensed child care centers or certified family child care homes to receive a child care subsidy for their own children, regardless of income.

Quality child care is essential for families and the workforce. Yet the sector has long struggled to recruit and retain staff because compensation is often low and workers can barely afford care for their own children. By allowing child care workers to access subsidy support, this bill would help ease that gap and make careers in early childhood more sustainable.

When those who care for our children can afford care for their own families, it:

  • Improves workforce stability in child care settings;

  • Reduces turnover and increases consistency for children and families;

  • Strengthens access to quality care throughout our communities.

Supporting those who give so much to others is an investment in West Virginia’s children and families. I respectfully urge you to support HB 4067.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: DeAnn Cruse on February 11, 2026 16:16
This bill will help alot of parents who don’t get paid much, but needs daycare for their kids so they can live to their best ability with the money they work for. This bill will also help kids that need social interactions with other kids, but some parents still can’t afford daycare to help with their child social interactions skills.  I especially feel all kids need daycare environment because it helps with their growth and learning, this bill will give any and all kids a chance to build their skills and mind for the future.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Emmett Pepper on February 11, 2026 16:18

I support this bill.

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Amber Rowlands on February 11, 2026 16:27
Childcare workers do not get paid enough and can barely afford groceries and utilities. They most often can barely afford childcare and need assistance.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Grace Cobble on February 11, 2026 16:35
My husband and I both work, I work in childcare. Therefore we don't qualify to get connect for our 16 month old to attend daycare. If I were to have to pay for daycare, it would be my whole paycheck and would cancel out the reason for me having a job. Simply put, we can't afford it. Instead, we rely on family members who also have jobs, doctors appointments, etc, and it is sometimes very inconsistant and unreliable. If we had help to afford daycare, it would help us out tremendously.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Kendra Sullivan on February 11, 2026 16:43
I support this legislation because it will support childcare workers.  Childcare workers are essential workers--without them, lots of others would be unable to work.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Taylor Samms on February 11, 2026 16:44
As a childcare worker and a single parent with a toddler, this bill would be a blessing for those looking for a job that is beneficial for the entire family, reducing work-life balance and financial stress that comes with raising children.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Emily Malcomb on February 11, 2026 16:46
Childcare employees are essential. If scholarships were provided for children of employees, this would increase retention of great early childhood educators. Many educators in this field are faced with high childcare costs and low pay. Their cost of care would be most, if not all, of their earnings, and as a result, they choose to stay home with their children. This would ensure that staff have the opportunity for their children to attend a quality childcare program that they are providing for other children.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Amandia Bowen on February 11, 2026 16:52
Without the daycare and daycare staff my family would have not been able to get the services my granddaughter needed to not only get her up to speed with other kids her age, but also complete her goals and exceed expectations. This is because of the hard work that ALL of the staff at Playmates in Ceredo have dedicated themselves to provide ALL of their families with educational, emotional, and psychological services and support. These remarkable individuals take amazing care of their communities children and never ask for anything in return!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Savannah Hayes on February 11, 2026 17:06
As an assistant director working in early childhood services and the parent of a 9-year-old daughter, I strongly support House Bill 4067. This bill would ensure that any employee working at least 20 hours per week in a licensed child care center or certified family child care home is eligible for a child care subsidy, regardless of household income.  I see firsthand how vital accessible, high-quality child care is not just for families, but for the providers who dedicate their time to nurturing and educating our children before they enter public school. Many child care workers struggle to afford the same services they provide, and expanding subsidy eligibility would help recruit and retain experienced, passionate educators. It also helps make child care more stable and reliable for families across West Virginia. As a working parent, the rising cost of child care affects my ability to support my own family and to balance work and home life. This bill would help ensure that child care workers who are helping raise the next generation, including my daughter, are supported too. I urge legislators to pass HB 4067 so that our children, providers, and families all benefit from a stronger child care system.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Kara Suiter on February 11, 2026 17:12
I own a center and unfortunately don’t have the funding to be able to offer free childcare to my teachers. I see some of them struggle, daily, and some, not even be able to bring their children to the very center that they work at because they cannot afford it. This would mean the world to my staff for them to be able to receive childcare for their own children after putting so much heart and to caring for other other’s children. Please consider our request and thank you for your time
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Megan Mellott on February 11, 2026 17:12
I would love to have a scholarship to help all darecare workers get free child care. Especially as a mom of four kids this would help me and other moms and dad's alike so much.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: joline on February 11, 2026 17:13
Finding child care is the biggest obstacle for working parents. Most stay at home parents don't stay home because they want to, they stay home because they cannot afford to pay for child care. Parents that do want to work spend months searching for child care and being put on wait lists. This bill would help to end the shortage of child care staff and providers, and encourage parents to return to work.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Adrian Wood on February 11, 2026 17:21
As someone who has worked in the childcare field for almost 11 years and been a parent of children attending childcare for the last 7.5 years. This bill would be not only beneficial to the employees of childcare centers themselves, I have worked in many roles in childcare and have seen the struggles of many teachers and centers as they create a delicate balance between paying employees/receiving a paycheck and paying a daycare bill/charging their employees. a lot of qualified teachers have struggles to keep up with their childcare bill even with above average pay rates and discounts on care. This bill would lift a lot of financial burdens and allow teachers to put more focus on the care they provide without financial burdens on their minds. please consider this bill for all the potential benefits that it could bring, such as increased productivity in current childcare teachers, more qualified childcare teachers returning to the field, and more benefits to encourage new childcare providers to join the field. Which will increase the availability of daycare spots for non teacher children due to the increased number of teachers.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Daniel B. Doyle on February 11, 2026 17:22
HB4067 - The Workforce Scholarship Act will provide people working in childcare a scholarship for their children to attend childcare. This keeps them at work so that others can work. Want to add people to and keep people in the workforce? This is a win - win.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Hanna estep on February 11, 2026 17:27
This bill only makes sense to pass allow the people watching your child free child care for someone to watch their child.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Carrie Ann Kidd on February 11, 2026 17:28

I’m a working parent who has lived through how limited child care options and high costs can destabilize a family. In rural areas, availability can be so tight that parents are forced into impossible choices—long commutes, patchwork care, or leaving the workforce—because there simply aren’t enough slots.

When my family was raising two young children, we faced extremely limited local child care options and costs that would have added up to tens of thousands of dollars over the years. The constant strain of trying to keep jobs, keep children cared for safely, and keep a household functioning took a real toll on our family.

HB 4067 is a practical workforce-and-family policy: if child care workers can access a subsidy based on their work hours rather than household income, it helps retain qualified staff, reduces turnover, and strengthens the child care system for everyone.

I urge you to pass HB 4067 to support the child care workforce and to make child care more stable and accessible for West Virginia families.

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Katelyn H on February 11, 2026 17:33
I am writing in favor of HB 4067. I am a resident of Summers County, WV where child care options are severely limited. They are limited on staff therefore limited on spots for children. This bill can help one of the reason why we have limited staff. If the childcare workers can afford to work while also providing care for their own children and other children more people would choose to work in childcare. The only options we have around here are home based childcare while they are okay the facility based child care options are generally more reliable and structured based.
Therefore, I believe HB 4067 will greatly benefit WV.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Anne Stroud on February 11, 2026 17:58
My name is Anne Stroud, I am a parent of a child in childcare in Monongalia County and I am in favor of HB 4067 providing childcare subsidies to workers in the childcare industry.   We have a critical gap in childcare across the state, when we moved to a new area we were on waitlists for quite some time prior to being able to secure care.  This bill would allow more workers to participate in the childcare industry and ensure that they themselves can secure quality care for their children.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Cierra Messer on February 11, 2026 18:01
Childcare workers need some kind of assistance. They don’t get paid enough to afford groceries and utilities.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Michelle Lusk on February 11, 2026 18:07
This is one of the most important bills for child care.  Without this bill, providers face major obstacles hiring and retaining quality staff.  This will be a benefit that child care workers deserve!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Stacy Shuman on February 11, 2026 18:08
To Whom It May Concern, I am here to speak upon this bill to give an insight on someone that this bill would have helped out when my children were little. Its no secret that West Virginia ranks almost dead last in so many areas compared to surrounding states and within our country. I am part of the poor working class in West Virginia. When my children were little, I was a stay-at-home mom but not fully by choice. I had a child that had complex medical issues that required lots of Dr. visits and one child that was healthy. My husband worked a decent job in 2007 to 2017 bringing home rough 40,000-52,000 depending on his overtime he would work. Due to having a child with extensive medical it would have helped to have me work. I had looked into working in the Childcare Center that I work in for the last 11 years, however we didn't qualify for assistance because my husband alone made too much for help but not enough to pay the bills and basic needs. If this would have been an option, all those years ago I would have worked when my children were young in a childcare setting like I do now and I would have been able to work to help my family out not just pay for my children to attend the center I was working in. I only joined the workforce when my children were old enough to become latch key kids and truthfully probably younger than they should have to be able to help support them. By passing this bill it will help several people looking to help support their families and not to fully live on government assistance because their income is just what their family needs to go off SNAP or even CHIPS because then they can afford their spouses medical insurance all because they didn't have to worry about paying for childcare that they are working in. In most cases it wouldn't even be enough to cover the cost I would owe my employer. I can attest to you as I type this if I had an infant that needed to attend the center I work at and pay for them working 40 hrs a week just one paycheck wouldn't even cover what I would owe them, that is saying that I don't have more than one child attending. This would also help my employer to be able to obtain employees that aren't afraid to lose their assistance and to give more consistent staffing to the center that is vital for children and their wellbeing as well.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Cris on February 11, 2026 18:11
I think these scholarships could help bring in people that really want to actually help kids. it is such an underpaying field already on top of the fact that so many people quit during Covid. My daughter’s class has had so many people would turn over already and that kind of loss at an early age causes a lot of anxiety and core schemas.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Lynda Trippett on February 11, 2026 18:11
Writing in support of HB 4067 This is important in order for childcare facilities to hire and retain qualified employees. They need a subsidy in order to afford child care for their children. Important for quality of child  care in WV.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Hope on February 11, 2026 18:11
I am a 19 year old soon to be mother working in childcare. I make 12$ an hour and work 36-40 hour weeks I can barely make ends meet as is. This bill would benefit so many people in so many ways! Some childcare can be up to 300$ a week! That is my whole paycheck! This bill would be so beneficial to so many.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Pamela Shope on February 11, 2026 18:19
This bill would make a meaningful difference in recruiting and retaining child care workers by helping them afford care for their own children. Supporting the child care workforce directly improves stability and quality for children and families across West Virginia.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Jennifer Trippett on February 11, 2026 18:20
As a childcare owner in West Virginia for almost 30 years, I strongly support HB 4067 because staffing is the single biggest challenge threatening childcare programs across our state. Many childcare employees leave the field because they cannot afford childcare for their own children. When we lose staff, classrooms close, families lose care, and parents miss work. This bill allows childcare employees to stay in the workforce by ensuring their children have access to care. It strengthens programs, protects childcare availability for working families, and supports employers across West Virginia who rely on stable childcare. I know from experience that when childcare payments were available for all essential workers during covid, I had several employees enter the workforce because with payment covered for their own child they could actually afford to work. These staff had degrees in early childhood education but with 2-3 small children of their own they couldn't afford to work because their whole check was going to pay for their own children's childcare. Passing HB 4067 helps keep classrooms open and childcare staffed which in turn means that businesses in the community can hire and expand because their employees can access childcare spots. One teacher in childcare added by this bill will open up to 10 childcare spots for children in the community. Sincerely, Jennifer Trippett
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Tiffany Miles on February 11, 2026 18:22
I feel people who work in childcare should have access to help with childcare because they dedicate their time and energy to supporting other families, often for long hours and modest pay. Caring for children is physically, emotionally and mentally demanding work, and many childcare workers are parents themselves who face the same challenges they help others navigate. Providing them affordable or subsidized childcare support not only reduces stress and burnout, but also helps retain experienced, compassionate professionals in the field. When childcare workers are supported, they are better able to focus on nurturing and educating  the children  in their care, creating a stronger and more stable environment for everyone involved.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Mikayla Steele on February 11, 2026 18:24
I believe that this bill would be highly advantageous to the working people of West Virginia, especially as our state works to grow our work force. Establishing the means for working parents to enter positions like childcare is also crucial for that goal and for the growth of childcare, a keystone of our economy that allows parents to work in times of such high pricing and low wages.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Amy Day on February 11, 2026 18:36
I am a parent and a childcare staff member in Wayne County, and this bill would help child care workers afford care for their own children so they can continue working in the field. Supporting the child care workforce helps stabilize child care for families across West Virginia.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Allison Wells on February 11, 2026 18:43
I am a child care worker in Wayne County, and this bill would help child care workers afford care for their own children so they can continue working in the field. Supporting the child care workforce helps stabilize child care for families across West Virginia.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Christina Cochran on February 11, 2026 18:45
I am a parent of two young children. I work an executive level job. When I was pregnant with each of them, my greatest concern was finding childcare. It is so stressful not knowing whether you will be able to find kind, loving, caring quality workers to take care of your kids when you go back to work. This bill that would provide scholarships to childcare workers would allow those with the heart for service and who love children to work these jobs with an added benefit. In the current state, childcare workers are paid just above minimum wage and many of them can barely make ends meet. This would give a critical benefit and enable childcare owners to attract and retain the high quality teachers we so desperately need. We need this bill to pass!! Please think of families like mine who depend on childcare teachers to take care of our kids, so we can work!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: April Melvin on February 11, 2026 18:49
I am an early childhood educator at the Child Development Academy at Marshall University.  While I do not have children of my own, many of my coworkers do. These coworkers work so very hard to take care of other people's children and then go home and take care of their own children  These same colleagues, barely make $13 an hour and our tuition is $200 a month. These colleagues have declined raises because it will take them out of qualifying for any type of financial assistance for childcare and they would not be able to work and bring their child to school. These individuals are some of the most caring, hard working people, that work so hard to ensure that each child in their care is given a quality education.  It should not come down to them being able to afford care for their child and being able to put food on the table. This bill would allow for them to bring their child to a quality center, continue to work,  but would also afford for them to be able to get the raise that they so greatly deserve. I know Kentucky follows this model and it would be wonderful and beneficial if WV did to. It would attract more people to the field that is so very important,  as the early years of a child's life are the most important.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Mary Ferda on February 11, 2026 18:54
We need the most qualified people who are invested in early childhood to be the ones who are taking care of our children. Please help to *make it make sense* for the people who want these jobs to choose these jobs— support this bill! Thank you!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Rebekah Aranda on February 11, 2026 18:56
While this is just one of many bills addressing the childcare crisis, I believe it is one of the best. It will bring workers into the industry and help with retention, which means more childcare availability and improved continuity of care for families and employers.   Early educators do an important and skilled job and should be reimbursed accordingly or at the very least be paid a living wage. I hope that this will encourage more West Virginians to enter this line of work. Please vote yes on HB 4067!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Shyann Jaques on February 11, 2026 19:08
This book would be absolutely life changing for so many early childhood educators. Please help pass this!!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Jennifer Gilkerson on February 11, 2026 19:15

In rural West Virginia, child care is not just a family issue — it is an economic survival issue. Agriculture, small businesses, tourism, and seasonal industries depend on a reliable workforce. When child care programs cannot retain staff, they reduce capacity or close classrooms. When that happens, parents cannot show up for work — and local businesses feel it immediately.

Many child care employees work 20 hours or more per week caring for other people’s children, yet struggle to afford care for their own. In small rural communities, wages are modest and options are limited. Without support, these employees often leave the field for other industries that offer better financial stability. Every time we lose a child care worker, we risk losing child care slots — and in rural areas, there are rarely backup options.

For agriculture and seasonal businesses especially, timing matters. Planting, harvest, farmers markets, festivals, tourism seasons, and local events require dependable labor. If parents cannot secure reliable child care, farms struggle to find workers, small businesses reduce hours, and community events suffer. The ripple effect is real and immediate.

HB 4067 is a workforce stabilization bill. Allowing child care employees to access a subsidy regardless of household income recognizes that child care is essential infrastructure that supports every other industry. Investing in the people who care for our children ensures that rural communities can keep their workforce engaged, their businesses operating, and their economies growing.

In rural West Virginia, we cannot afford to lose more child care providers. Supporting the child care workforce supports agriculture, small businesses, and the families who keep our communities strong.

For these reasons, I respectfully and strongly urge passage of HB 4067.

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Brittany Jobe on February 11, 2026 19:15

As an early learning center director, I believe this bill is critical to sustaining high-quality child care. The heart of our center is the educators who show up every day to make a meaningful difference in children’s lives. When those same employees struggle to afford care for their own children, it directly impacts retention, morale, and the stability families depend on. Supporting them by helping cover the cost of their children’s care is an investment in the workforce that makes quality early education possible. I strongly urge passage of this bill.

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Riley Dixon on February 11, 2026 19:18
Teachers in childcare that are allowing their own child to be in the same childcare facility as them are troopers they deserve any type of free childcare.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Brittany Rarick on February 11, 2026 19:22
Childcare workers are often forced to leave the field because they can’t afford care for their own children. Offering free childcare would reduce turnover and keep experienced teachers in classrooms — which directly benefits children.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Ivy Christian on February 11, 2026 19:22
This is important because child care workers struggle to pay other expenses and by adding child care pay on top of bills and the other expenses is not easy. By passing this bill it would truly be helping  these child care workers out knowing they can bring their child to work with them and not have to worry about how they are going to afford the child care.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Kori Burnette on February 11, 2026 19:27
I am a parent in Wayne County, and this bill would help child care workers afford care for their own children so they can continue working in the field. Supporting the child care workforce helps stabilize child care for families across West Virginia.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Kate Dillon on February 11, 2026 19:30
I am a 2024 graduate of Marshall University working as an early childhood educator in Huntington. I make just enough money to pay my rent/bills, feed my cat and myself, and put gas in my car. I cannot begin to imagine how anyone with my salary pays for childcare on top of that. It's a shame that any person spending 40+ hours a week teaching is not able to afford childcare for their own kids. This legislation is vital!!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Shyanna Ashcraft on February 11, 2026 19:48
I am a toddler teacher and a mother in Wayne County, and this bill would help child care workers afford care for their own children so they can continue working in the field. Supporting the child care workforce helps stabilize child care for families across West Virginia.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Sashia Brewer on February 11, 2026 19:51
I am a parent and teacher in Wayne County, and this bill would help child care workers afford care for their own children so they can continue working in the field. Supporting the child care workforce helps stabilize child care for families across West Virginia.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Stephanie Elkins on February 11, 2026 19:58
This extra help would benefit my family and I so much. These days it’s hard to stretch a dollar. Our weekly grocery bills are almost doubling. The price of usual, everyday items such as food, personal items and cleaning supplies are more expensive than they once were. A simple raise is a help, but looking forward to a little extra money in my pocket each week from this bill would give us more money for the usual everyday items. Please consider passing this bill!!!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Kristy Ritz on February 11, 2026 19:58

Covering the cost of child care for child care program employees is a workforce strategy.  Child care programs are struggling to recruit and retain staff, not because people don’t want to work with children, but because they cannot afford to. Offering child care as a guaranteed benefit makes these positions far more competitive with retail, hospitality, and other entry-level jobs. It becomes a tangible incentive that attracts qualified candidates. When child care classrooms close due to staffing shortages, working parents across every industry are impacted. Supporting child care staff ensures programs stay open, which keeps other sectors functioning. Investing in child care employees is an economic safeguard. If we want a stable child care system, we must first stabilize the workforce that makes it possible.

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Colleen Anderson on February 11, 2026 20:03
Please vote YES on this bill! Child care workers need all the help we can give them.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Mary Graves on February 11, 2026 20:08
This bill is important to me personally. I cannot take raises offered because if I lose subsidy, paying for childcare is more than what a raise would offer.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Tiffany Cleveland on February 11, 2026 20:08
When I tell you this is so important!! This is HUGE. This could help SO many people! Including myself! If childcare workers were able to have their childcare fees taken care of, that would change the game! More people would want to work in childcare, making staff issues not a problem. The workers could keep their whole paycheck and not have to worry about paying for the fee! I can’t stress enough how much this would change SO many lives!! (In the best way possible)
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Amber on February 11, 2026 20:12
This would be very beneficial to me and my family as the owner of a daycare center. It would also make a huge difference in the lives of my employees.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Megan Russell on February 11, 2026 20:13
Hello, As a working parent who has relied on daycare services for my child for a decade, I strongly implore you to support House Bill 4067. The child care workers are responsible for our most precious resource and are compensated at a level much lower than deserved. This bill could help ensure quality care for their children and encourage job retention which is desperately needed in the facilities across our state. Thank you for your consideration. Megan Russell
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: CAMMIE hall on February 11, 2026 20:20
This bill would allow for staffing to be able to afford childcare which would open up more opportunities for employers to obtain qualified employees in childcare.  In addition it will help dedicated childcare workers whom are already working for low wages  to be able to afford to work in childcare which accommodates many parents needs with their own children’s schedules allowing the parent to be able to also provide not just financially but also care taking their own children.  Many families have to have the other parent work long hours just to financially survive.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Jodi on February 11, 2026 20:26
This should be a given! The role of a child care provider to children other than their own takes a very special person. This bill should be passed to give these special people the opportunity to earn an income while caring for others.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Angela Woodson on February 11, 2026 20:28
Childcare providers should receive free childcare because it is the most effective way to address the current staffing crisis. We cannot expect professionals to work in a crucial industry for near-poverty wages while simultaneously paying a mortgage-sized tuition for their own children. Offering free care ensures we retain experienced educators, which directly improves the quality of care for all children.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Anna Smith on February 11, 2026 20:30
Dear Delegate/Senator, I am writing as an early childhood educator to respectfully urge you to support the childcare bills currently being heard in committee. Every day, I see firsthand how critical access to high-quality, affordable childcare is for children, families, and our communities. These bills are not just about funding programs — they are about supporting working families, strengthening our workforce, and ensuring young children have safe, nurturing, developmentally appropriate environments where they can thrive. As an early childhood educator, I am deeply committed to providing high-quality care and education. I work hard to create meaningful learning experiences, build strong relationships with families, and support children’s social, emotional, and cognitive growth. However, like many in this field, I also face the very real challenge of worrying about whether I can afford the same quality care for my own children. It is difficult and disheartening to dedicate my career to early learning while struggling with the financial realities that come with working in this profession. Early childhood education lays the foundation for lifelong learning. When childcare programs are adequately supported, children benefit from stable relationships, enriched learning experiences, and consistent routines that promote healthy development. Families benefit from knowing their children are cared for in safe, high-quality environments, allowing them to remain active members of the workforce. Educators benefit from policies that recognize the essential and professional nature of our work. I strongly encourage you to vote in favor of these bills and invest in the future of our youngest citizens, their families, and the educators who serve them. Thank you for your time and consideration. Sincerely, Anna Smith Early Childhood Educator Preschool Teacher- Marshall University Child Development Academy
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Marissa Johnson on February 11, 2026 20:32
This would be an incredible incentive for childcare professionals to stay in the field. This work is hard and the pay is low and any extra benefit for the teachers working in this field would help. Please support this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Sarah Ratliff on February 11, 2026 20:38
This bill would allow for staffing to afford quality child care while serving in the child care industry. This would allow parents to be able to financially afford their own personal child’s needs. It will also open up the ability for employees to gain more qualified employees.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Kasey Stevens on February 11, 2026 20:48
Hi, my name is Kasey Stevens and I am a working parent with a child in childcare. I cannot do my job well or frankly at all if I do not have access to safe, reliable childcare. And while I would love for that to be affordable, I would love more for my child's teachers to not have to worry about paying for their own childcare, especially in a facility where they are constantly investing into the lives of other children and being a huge blessing to families.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Cate Johnson on February 11, 2026 20:52
We need quality daycare workers and we need to do more to make it an attractive employment option. Providing subsidies for their children in daycare is a great start. I fully support this bill!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Sara Hooks on February 11, 2026 20:55
This bill would be such a big help to not only me but other families who struggle to afford childcare while working in childcare. As a single mom I struggle to afford childcare alongside all my other bills even if some help and having a scholarship for my child would be an incredible help!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Mary Jane Mann on February 11, 2026 20:56
Please support this bill to help provide adequate childcare centers for working parents
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Alex on February 11, 2026 20:58
This bill is very important to many people in our community and would help other people be able to work in childcare without having to give their entire paycheck to pay for childcare services. This will boost the economy and everyone wants more people to work and this will help with that.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Sam Petsonk on February 11, 2026 21:09
I urge hasty passage of HB 4067 to improve the accessibility, reliability, and quality of care and to enhance the working conditions for childcare workers in this state---an urgent need that is holding back our workforce and economy.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Sarah Hall on February 11, 2026 21:55
Child care is a struggle for many families. This is a step in the right direction and will add support for working families. I hope to see it pass. Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Madison Edwards on February 11, 2026 22:31
  I am a parent in Cabell County, and enrollment-based subsidy payments would help keep child care programs open and stable. This would directly support families like mine by ensuring consistent care and staffing even when children are absent.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Madison Hutchinson on February 11, 2026 23:38
  1. I urge the support of this bill as a mother who relys on childcare to provide for my home. It took two years for me to get accepted to a childcare facility due to low availability, as a result of unfulfilled employment at childcare facilities. These workers are not paid what they deserve, but at the least they deserve a benefit for doing the work that most parents rely on to keep the world moving. If West Virginia really wants to see more folks working, we as a state need to invest in those who keep our parental employees employed, starting with our childcare workers and providers. When our childcare centers are staffed and able to work, we will also see the workforce showing up to work.
I also draw this support for the bill as a daughter of a mother who worked at a childcare facility most of my childhood until I was in high school. Some of the employers offered a small discount for us to attend the childcare while she was working, which made our home life much easier. It was at other employers where there were no childcare benefits that led to dinnerless nights and spending 2-3 extra hours away from our mom every day because we had to go to a baby sitter or friends house after school due to the expensive care her employer wouldn't offer. The proposed subsidies would not only provide opportunities for parents to seek employment as t these care facilities for a much more affordable expense, but also keep mothers and fathers employed without worrying about the care of their children, and sacrificing over half their paycheck to assure proper care for them
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Wes Holden on February 12, 2026 00:02
West Virginia faces a critical challenge: retaining our young talent and supporting working class families. A key to this struggle is accessible and affordable childcare. Many young mothers eager to contribute to West Virginia’s economy, are sidelined by the sheer difficulty of finding adequate childcare for their children.  This isn’t just a family problem, it’s an economic one that impacts our entire state. Our WV legislature has a clear path forward: we must empower communities to innovate through pilot programs. By passing legislation that establishes dedicated funding streams and flexible regulatory frameworks, we can allow our rural towns and communities to experiment with diverse childcare solutions to tailored to their unique needs. This could mean supporting community-based childcare cooperatives, employer-sponsored childcare incentives, home based childcare networks, public-private partnerships. These pilot programs, while focused locally, can provide invaluable data and best practices that can be scaled statewide. By taking a proactive, community- driven approach, we can address this pressing issue, ensure our young families thrive and build a stronger West Virginia for generations to come. It is time to put people over profit, and that includes investing in the future of our children and our workforce.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Aimee Gwinn on February 12, 2026 06:13
The means of living right now is a struggle for the low and middle class. Regardless of a provider and their employee household, it is unfair to change their subsidiary. Childcare is in crisis of losing much needed services already. Funding should not be changed because of the household members income.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Elaine Bowen on February 12, 2026 06:52
Childcare providers are the backbone of the WV economy. They are the most under-appreciated and underpaid workers - this bill helps to change that! Talk to any parent with young children. Talk to struggling childcare providers. This measure is a "no-brainer" - PASS THIS BILL!
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Linda Stein on February 12, 2026 07:08
This bill addresses a shortage of childcare workers by enabling parents to join the work force. Childcare is a poorly paid but essential job. This makes the job a more attractive option.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Katelyn perine on February 12, 2026 07:18
This is soo important and should be passed to ensure the centers can keep up with the staffing of qualified and good employees and so they are able to work without using almost their whole checks just to pay for their childcare.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Tammie Rizzio on February 12, 2026 07:50
I am writing to you in support of HB4067 which would allow employees providing childcare a subsidy for their own children to attend care regardless of their household income. My agency, Youth Health Service, Inc. located in Elkins, has operated a daycare center since 1997 and while managing a daycare has always been challenging from a financial perspective the last five to six years have been especially so and required us to make significant changes to the way we operate. We have had to reduce our capacity size as we have been unable to recruit and retain qualified employees to staff the classrooms and our ability to train our staff beyond the required trainings has been diminished. Providing childcare subsidies for those who care for our community's children would greatly enhance our employee's desire to stay in the field and as a result improve the quality of care as seasoned staff are able to be maintained. Over the last year, our program has lost five employees due to economic hardship and their ability to work in a different industry for better pay. While this bill does not directly impact pay, it does offer relief for their own child care bills and would have a positive impact on their household incomes. I encourage the WV Legislature to pass this bill to better ensure childcare provider's abilities to provide quality care to WV's most prized possession..its children. Thank you, Tammie Rizzio, Youth Health Service/Home Ties Child Development Center Executive Co-Director
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Shyann McIntyre on February 12, 2026 08:00
I am a childcare worker and a mother of 2. I make too much to qualify for child care funds and I don’t make enough to private pay. This bill will help not only my childcare provider but also help me financially.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Jody Mohr on February 12, 2026 08:14
I urge support for HB 4067. Providing  childcare workers with a scholarship for their children to participate in safe/reliable childcare is a common sense approach to support both those much needed workers and their children who are currently faced with enormous difficulty in both finding employment in the childcare arena as well as securing affordable childcare for their own children.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Marisa Jackson on February 12, 2026 08:29
I am writing to ask that you support this bill. Affordable child care is a barrier for so many WV working families. Child care workers earn an average of less than $24K a year. With 56% of parents with children under 5 in the workforce, this would be a huge help to families who are struggling to work and pay for childcare. Many of my personal friends have told me a large percentage of their salary goes to childcare while they rely on their spouse's income for living expenses. I ask that you vote for House Bill 4067 to help WV working families. This also makes our state more attractive for families who are considering WV as a home.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Rebecca martin on February 12, 2026 08:36
I support this bill 100%.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Dave Cantrell on February 12, 2026 08:51

The challenges our state's childcare system is facing don't just hurt working parents, they hurt our invaluable childcare providers, and our state's economy as a whole. Investing in childcare must be a priority for this state to move forward. I ask you to please support this bill. 

2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Shirley on February 12, 2026 09:01
I think this would be so amazing for women who have children that need to earn an income.
2026 Regular Session HB4067 (Human Services)
Comment by: Hilary Kinney on February 12, 2026 10:23
The cost of childcare continues to be a strain on working class families in the state. Add in the shortage of providers and it's disastrous for our state. I would love to see support for this bill. It incentivizes childcare providers to stay in the workforce when they have their own children, and makes care attainable for them when they are caring for the children of others, too. Please pass this bill!