How to Contact Your Representative About Child Care Funding

Federal child care funding is being cut in 2026, making an already unaffordable system worse. Here's how to contact your representative.

๐Ÿ“‹ Federal Issue ๐Ÿ”ฅ Urgent ๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ‘ง Families 119th Congress

The Issue

What's at Stake

Child care in the United States is both unaffordable and inaccessible for millions of families. The average annual cost of center-based child care exceeds $15,000 โ€” more than college tuition in many states. Federal programs like the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) and Head Start provide critical subsidies, but both are facing budget cuts in 2026.

Affordable child care is an economic issue, a workforce issue, and a child development issue. Cutting federal child care funding doesn't just hurt families โ€” it reduces workforce participation, hampers economic growth, and affects children's long-term outcomes.

$15,000+
Average annual cost of center-based child care
2M
Children served by Head Start and Early Head Start programs
1 in 6
Children who are eligible for child care subsidies but don't receive them due to funding gaps

Take Action

How to Contact Your Representative โ€” Step by Step

1

Find your representatives

Enter your ZIP code in RepReach to see your House rep and both Senators with direct phone numbers.

2

Call to protect child care funding

'I urge you to protect Child Care and Development Block Grant funding and Head Start' is a concrete, actionable ask.

3

Connect it to your family's experience

If child care costs have affected your ability to work, save, or make ends meet, one sentence about that gives your call immediate personal weight.

4

Follow up in writing

RepReach generates a personalized written message based on your position.

What to Say

Tips for Your Call or Email

๐Ÿ“
Start with your city. Child care access varies enormously by community โ€” your local context matters.
๐Ÿ‘ถ
Personal experience is powerful. If you've struggled with child care costs or access, one sentence about that is more persuasive than any statistic.
๐ŸŽฏ
Name the specific program. CCDBG subsidies, Head Start, or Pre-K funding โ€” specificity makes your call more impactful.
โฑ๏ธ
Under 60 seconds is ideal. Brief and clear is always best.

RepReach writes your script for you

Tap. Script. Call. Done.

Tell the app where you stand and add any personal details โ€” RepReach builds a complete, personalized call or email script around your story. No blank page, no guessing what to say.

Learn More โ†’

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What child care programs are at risk in 2026?
The Child Care and Development Block Grant, which funds subsidies for low-income families, and Head Start and Early Head Start, which provide comprehensive early childhood programs for low-income children, are both facing budget cuts. These programs serve millions of children and families.
Why is child care so expensive in the U.S.?
Child care costs are high because quality care requires significant labor from trained staff, facilities, and materials โ€” but parents can only afford to pay so much. Federal subsidies are the primary mechanism for closing the gap between what quality care costs and what families can afford.
Does calling about child care make a difference?
Yes. Child care is a top-priority issue for working families across the political spectrum, and constituent pressure from parents has historically been effective in protecting child care funding. Members hear from parents who have firsthand experience with the child care crisis.
How do I find my representative's phone number?
Enter your ZIP code in the RepReach app to instantly find your House representative and both U.S. Senators with their direct district office phone numbers.

Turn awareness into action

Your voice matters. Use it.

Tap. Script. Call. Done.

RepReach finds your representatives by ZIP code and builds a personalized script around your story โ€” so you're never staring at a blank page wondering what to say.

Learn More About RepReach โ†’

Keep Going

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