States no longer must cap child care costs for families, or pay providers predictably
What happened
Federal rules for child care subsidies just got looser for states. States no longer have to cap how much families pay, or guarantee payments to child care providers based on enrollment.
Why it matters
The federal government previously set limits on how much low-income families had to pay for child care, and how providers were paid. Now, states can raise co-payments for families and shift payment risks to providers, for example, by paying only for actual attendance instead of enrollment. This means states have more control over their budgets, but families could face higher costs and providers less stable income.
The signal
Watch Texas, Florida, and Ohio. These states have historically fought federal child care mandates the hardest, citing administrative costs.
If their state human services departments or legislatures introduce emergency rules or plan amendments before August to roll back the 7% copay cap or reinstate attendance-linked payment deductions, it proves the federal pullback was exactly the permission slip they were waiting for. If they do nothing, the administrative burden wasn't actually the problem.