**π Survey Reveals Most Sioux Fallsians Support Tax-Subsidized Childcare πΆπ½π️ | Here’s What the Data Shows**
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Simplified: About 7 in 10 Sioux Falls residents support using tax money to make childcare more affordable, according to survey results from the 2025 National Community Survey.
**A new survey shows that a majority of Sioux Falls residents support tax-subsidized childcare ππΆπ½. Explore the findings, community opinions, and what the results could mean for families across the city.**
·
Childcare costs more than in-state college tuition in South
Dakota, and most parents – as many as 9 in 10 – are paying more than they can
afford, according to federal definition of childcare affordability at no more
than 7% of the annual household income.
·
The childcare crisis in Sioux Falls is well-documented, and
after months of research, a 97-page report outlining specific, actionable solutions
released in 2023, and a separate city task force studying the issue in 2024, City
Council has shied away from using city dollars
to support families.
·
But childcare re-entered the chat during
Tuesday's City Council informational meeting when Councilor Jennifer Sigette
said she was "shocked" to see that the majority of residents in a
statistically valid survey say they supported using tax money to make childcare
affordable.
"There was some traction on this a year ago, and we just
didn't feel the support to continue to try to get a project up and running to
help make childcare more affordable," Sigette said. "And yet this is
70% of people saying tax dollars should go to help ... This makes me think we
need to bring that project up again."
Tell me more
Of those who answered
"yes," more than 60% said the support should be for all families, while
the rest indicated support should be just for low-income families.
It's unlikely the city will see
any support from the state legislature on childcare subsidies or
any other early childhood education support.
·
Gov. Larry Rhoden last year vetoed a measure that would've made
childcare providers eligible to receive state assistance for their own
children.
But, there are examples of communities finding childcare
solutions without state support. Rapid City, for example, piloted a
"tri-share" program in which businesses paid one-third of childcare
costs, parents paid another third, and the final third was covered by a nonprofit.
·
In other states, the tri-share model has also been implemented
with the city paying one-third of the costs rather than philanthropists.
What happens next?
The community survey shows the data, but there's no action plan in place based on the findings. It's simply information the City Council now has at its disposal, but it'll be up to the councilors to decide if and how they want to act on that moving forward
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