From marches and petitions to a constitutional amendment, a years-long campaign led to New Mexico becoming the first state in the US to offe
Cecilia Nowell at The Guardian:
One crisp morning in 2018, Sandra Ibarra pulled on a pair of gloves to ward off the winter chill and picked up the first cardboard sign she had designed for a protest. As a recent immigrant to the United States, Ibarra was wary of attending a demonstration. But since arriving in the United States from Mexico she had had to change careers â it was difficult to recertify her licensing as an accountant in a new country and easier to begin working in childcare â and was shocked by the poor pay. Although she taught, cooked, cleaned and did the books for a small childcare center, she was earning minimum wage. A classmate at the local community college had suggested Ibarra attend the rally, and stick around afterward for a meal with OlĂ©, a grassroots non-profit committed to organizing working-class families.
She started attending weekly events with OlĂ©, joining a growing network of mostly immigrant women who, like her, were working in childcare. âWhen you have one person or two people, no one listens to you. But when we have a lot that are united and working toward the same cause, thatâs when they say, âOh OK, what do you want?ââ Ibarra said, speaking in Spanish. âWe went out to the streets to march, to demand wage increases. We made banners. We went out to demand better benefits, because obviously many people like me earned very little,â she said, describing dozens of marches that she attended over the seven years she has fought for early-childhood educators. OlĂ© similarly organized hundreds of other childcare workers across New Mexico, who have long campaigned to improve wages for early-childhood educators and access to childcare for working families. That work reached a dramatic conclusion when New Mexicoâs governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, announced earlier this year that the state would become the first in the United States to offer free childcare to all its families, regardless of income, starting 1 November. Childcare facilities that commit to paying entry-level staff a minimum of $18 an hour will receive an incentive rate from the state. The stateâs efforts to improve childhood wellbeing have gained national attention since it began offering free childcare to a majority of families in 2022. But the fight to implement universal childcare began more than a decade ago â and brought together a wide coalition of childcare workers, families, lawmakers, researchers and even the Catholic church. As New Mexico rolls out its universal free childcare program, that same coalition is eyeing strategies to ensure childcare workers are paid a living wage, build out a childcare workforce and further bolster the stateâs social safety net.
New Mexicoâs success in developing a free, universal childcare program is a crucial win for progressives at a time of sweeping federal cuts to early childhood education. Donald Trumpâs signature tax and spending bill did not increase funding for the childcare and development block grant and Head Start to keep up with inflation, and eliminated preschool development grants and the Child Care Access Means Parents in Schools Program, renewing efforts to slash funding for early childhood education. It also cut $1tn in funding from Medicaid, which many low-income Americans â including nearly 30% of childcare workers â rely on for health insurance. Those particular funding losses come as Trump has announced new steps to dismantle the education department following broad layoffs.
[...] The roots of New Mexicoâs free childcare program date back to 2008 â when advocates dreamed up a plan to pay for it. Although the state had made notable investments in child wellbeing as early as 2005, when the then lieutenant governor, Diane Denish, championed efforts to offer free pre-kindergarten to all the stateâs four-year-olds, New Mexico still ranked among the worst states for child wellbeing nationwide. In 2008, the Annie E Casey Foundation ranked New Mexico dead last for child wellbeing in the United States.
[...]
At the same time, the dynamics of the state legislature began changing. In 2018, a majority of Democrats elected to the stateâs house were women; two years later, women won the majority of seats in the chamber. And a growing number of those women were former teachers â like Natalie Figueroa, Debra Sariñana and Joy Garratt â single or working mothers â such as Georgene Louis, Liz Thomson and Micaela Cadena â or activists â like Angelica Rubio, Kristina Ortez and Linda Serrato. âWhen you get Kristina Ortez, who has two school-age children, and you have Linda Serrato, who at the time was literally pregnant and had a two-year-old, that changes the dynamics,â said Javier MartĂnez, today the speaker of New Mexicoâs house of representatives, who began organizing around immigrant rights and childcare as an activist at the Partnership for Community Action in the early 2000s. He himself ran for office in 2014 out of a desire to see New Mexico implement free childcare, and recalls more working-class candidates and moms running for office after Trump was elected to his first term in 2016.
[...]
A few weeks later, in January 2021, New Mexico Democrats once again introduced a bill to amend the state constitution to fund early childhood education. That spring, the state house passed the amendment 44-23 and the Senate 26-16.
SĂĄnchez knew it had attracted statewide attention when the local newspaper, the Albuquerque Journal, asked gubernatorial candidates to weigh in on whether they supported the constitutional amendment in the 2022 election. âThey made it a litmus test,â he said. âAnd that was good for us, because it elevated it.â The constitutional amendment went to the voters in the November election â and passed in a landslide, with 70.3% voting in favor. âNew Mexico in many ways has been treated like a colony for a long time,â said MartĂnez. âOne of the arguments we made on the constitutional amendment for many years is that this is the peopleâs money.â
âBut there was still the problem of Congress,â said SĂĄnchez. He credits state senator Martin Heinrich for carrying it over the finish line and Regis Pecos, the executive director of the All Pueblo Council of Governors â a tribal leadership organization for the 20 pueblos of New Mexico and Texas â who encouraged Native American voters to write to their senators in support of the amendment.
The then US Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, then added the constitutional amendment to the 2022 omnibus package. âAnd then he told the Republicans this is not up for debate because these people shouldnât even have to be hereâ appealing a century-old law, said SĂĄnchez. That package passed, and on 23 December 2022 Joe Biden signed the constitutional amendment into law. To start, New Mexico made childcare free for families earning up to 400% of the federal poverty level, or about $124,000 for a family of four. That meant about half of New Mexicoâs children now qualified.
Then, on 8 September this year, Governor Lujan Grisham announced in an executive order that New Mexico would begin offering free childcare to all families, regardless of income, on 1 November. Many New Mexicans were jubilant: sharing with local media that the announcement had convinced some to remain in the state and given them hope of saving for future expenses. But Republicans emphasized that the executive order must be codified in law to remain in effect after Lujan Grishamâs term ends next year. In the meantime, advocates, like Ibarra, are still organizing to recommend a fair pay scale for early-childhood educators.
This is good news: New Mexico offers free child care for all. More states should follow their lead.













