S-4335-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Joni Ernst (R-IA)
What it does
This bill would make several changes to how the Department of Defense (DoD) provides child care to military families. It would remove a prior military service requirement for child care workers, allow national service volunteers (such as AmeriCorps participants) to work in military child development centers, create a "preclearance" background check system so applicants can be vetted before a job opening exists, authorize job-sharing arrangements for child care staff, and allow child care workers limited access to military base benefits such as commissary privileges and tuition assistance. The bill would also require DoD to build a department-wide data system tracking child care capacity and waitlists, and to submit reports to Congress on waitlists and the relationship between child care availability and military readiness.
Who benefits
Active-duty military service members and their families, who would have access to a larger pool of child care workers and potentially shorter waitlists. Military spouses, who often bear primary child care responsibilities during deployments. Dual-military couples, who face compounded scheduling challenges. Prospective child care workers who could not previously qualify due to prior service requirements, including caregivers, students, and part-time workers who benefit from job-sharing. National service program participants (e.g., AmeriCorps volunteers) who gain placement opportunities. Military child development center administrators who would have more staffing flexibility. Congress, which would receive better data on child care gaps and readiness impacts.
Who is hurt
Current child care workers who previously met the prior service requirement may face increased competition for positions. Full-time child care workers could see reduced hours or positions converted to job-sharing arrangements. Private off-base child care providers near military installations may lose clients or workers to on-base centers made more attractive by new benefits. Taxpayers would bear the cost of expanded benefits (commissary access, tuition assistance, referral bonuses) for a new category of workers. Military installation operators may face administrative burdens from implementing the preclearance system, data reporting requirements, and new benefit programs within the mandated timelines.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that military child care shortages directly undermine readiness — DoD's own data has shown tens of thousands of military families on child care waitlists, and service members who cannot secure child care miss training, deployments, and duty assignments. They contend that removing the prior service requirement and enabling national service volunteers expands the qualified worker pipeline without lowering safety standards, since preclearance background checks (including FBI fingerprinting) are still required. The job-sharing and benefits provisions address a documented retention problem: child care worker turnover at military installations is high partly because compensation and flexibility lag behind comparable civilian positions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding access to military base benefits — commissary privileges, fitness centers, and tuition assistance — for a new class of civilian contract workers sets a precedent that could strain benefit systems designed for service members and their families, diluting a key component of military compensation. They contend that the bill's mandated timelines (a data system, multiple reports, and new regulations all within 90–180 days) may be operationally unrealistic and could result in rushed, low-quality implementation. Critics may also argue that relying on national service volunteers for child care at sensitive military installations raises security and continuity-of-care concerns that the bill does not fully address.