HR-5363-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Commodity Markets, Digital Assets, and Rural Development.
Sponsored by Marie Perez (D-WA)
What it does
This bill would direct the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to create the Expanding Childcare in Rural America Initiative. Under the initiative, USDA would be required to give priority consideration to applicants seeking certain existing loans or grants if their proposals address the availability, quality, or cost of childcare in agricultural or rural communities. The bill would also require USDA to prioritize farming-dependent counties, ensure geographically balanced distribution of benefits, and submit a report to Congress evaluating the initiative's outcomes.
Who benefits
Parents and caregivers in rural and agricultural communities who currently lack affordable or accessible childcare options. Children under kindergarten age in rural areas who would gain access to early education programs. Rural childcare providers and small childcare businesses that could access USDA loan or grant funding. Farm workers and agricultural employees whose productivity may improve with reliable childcare. Rural employers and agricultural operations that may benefit from a more stable workforce. Farming-dependent counties that receive prioritized funding distribution.
Who is hurt
Applicants in non-rural or non-agricultural communities who compete for the same USDA loan and grant programs and may receive lower priority as a result. Urban and suburban childcare providers who would not be eligible for this prioritization. Taxpayers who bear the cost of any loans that default or grants that are expended. USDA staff who would absorb new administrative and reporting responsibilities. Applicants in rural areas that are not classified as farming-dependent counties, who may receive less priority relative to those that are.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that rural childcare deserts are a well-documented barrier to workforce participation, with USDA data showing that over half of rural Americans live in areas with insufficient licensed childcare capacity. They contend that directing existing USDA loan and grant infrastructure toward childcare — rather than creating a new program — is a cost-efficient approach that leverages established rural development tools to address a gap that market forces have not filled in low-density communities.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that childcare policy falls primarily within state and local jurisdiction, and that layering a federal prioritization mandate onto existing USDA programs may distort those programs' original purposes and reduce flexibility for rural communities with other pressing needs. They contend that prioritization requirements could create bureaucratic bottlenecks, slow loan and grant processing for all rural applicants, and that a reporting mandate adds administrative costs without guaranteeing measurable improvements in childcare access.