Military Spouse
  • Employment
    • Military Friendly Employers
    • Virtual Job Fair
  • Education
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Open A Franchise
  • Life
    • Deployment
    • Homecoming
    • Moving
  • Relationships
  • At Home
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • All Magazines
No Result
View All Result
  • Employment
    • Military Friendly Employers
    • Virtual Job Fair
  • Education
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Open A Franchise
  • Life
    • Deployment
    • Homecoming
    • Moving
  • Relationships
  • At Home
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • All Magazines
No Result
View All Result
Military Spouse
No Result
View All Result

Military Child Care: Good or Good Enough?

Marla Bautista by Marla Bautista
in Life
0
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

It’s no secret that the child care situation on military installations is less than perfect.

No, I’m going to be honest because the truth needs to be said. The lack of childcare and the extensive regulations preventing effectively running centers is unsuitable to the needs of those it serves.

Military families cannot maintain financial security without stable employment, and they cannot maintain stable employment without adequate childcare. From extensive waitlists to limited hours, military families are often left scrambling to find child care. This leads to families using uncertified daycare facilities, over capacitated in-home care, and other, sometimes unsafe options for child care. 

Did you know that military child care facilities service over 200k children? According to the latest Congressional Research Service report, there are about 23 thousand employed at military child care facilities around the world. These facilities bring in 400 million dollars in fees alone. This number does not include additional funding provided by Non-Appropriated Funds (NAF) or other entities. It’s no surprise that the Army receives the bulk of financial support from Operation and Maintenance Funds. However, what is intriguing is that they have the least amount of allocated child care slots for military sponsors than any other branch. Why is that? Another military mystery. 

Before obtaining child care at an on-post military installation, you must register your child. Some installations offer walk-in registrations for child care, while others require appointments to be made. You are required to produce medical documents, including physicals and shot records for all children. This is a standard operating procedure as child care facilities on and off-post want to ensure the health and well being of your child.

However, If your child has special needs like he/she takes daily medications, has an IEP, or allergies, buckle up because it’s going to be a bumpy process. I have both a child with special developmental needs and a child with food allergies. You can imagine how long and arduous the registration process can be—collecting documentation from doctors, meeting with the SNAP team, waiting for approval, all painstakingly redundant. Once you’ve made it past the registration process, you have crossed over to the waitlist realm, where weeks turn into months, and even years. 

So tell me, what’s the longest you’ve waited for military child care?

The longest I’ve waited was six months. I honestly checked my child’s status every day for at least two of those months. The explanations for the long waitlists were: limited staff and lack of space within child care facilities to accommodate families in need.

The Military Child Care Act was originally created in 1989 because of concern for the conditions of off post child care facilities. However, the DOD’s evolution of caring for diverse military families has been slow to accommodate the needs of the 21st Century military family. With that being said, many strides have been made. Some installations offer date night care once a month allowing parents after-hours care, up to date academic curriculum to help prepare children for school, and FCC’s to help with overflow.

The staff members I’ve personally encountered are kind, loving, and have genuinely cared for my children. But many of them were overworked and often expected to excel with limited resources. Despite this, there is a way you can help positively impact military child care facilities. 

What You Can Do

  • Speak up about insufficient care at your local installation. 
  • Volunteer at the CDC. Jobs like planning activities, cutting projects, and other office work does not require you be an employee and allows the center’s employees to man more childcare rooms. 

Together, we can help make our military child care facilities accessible and adequate for everyone. Holding our leadership accountable and asking them to fight for our families isn’t wrong, accepting sub-par care is.

Tags: childcare in the militarydaycaredaycare in the militarydaycare raising kidsmilitary child care
Previous Post

Protect Your Household Goods During PCS Moves

Next Post

Epic Mother’s Day Giveaway from Milspouse-owned Businesses!

Next Post

Epic Mother's Day Giveaway from Milspouse-owned Businesses!

Latest

Relationships

Valentine’s Day Alone Again? How Military Spouses Reclaim the Day Without the Guilt

Relationships

Valentine’s Day in the Military: When Love Is Real But the Timing Is Trash

Relationships

Love Languages, But Make it Military…

Relationships

Loving Someone in Uniform: How to Stay Connected When the Schedule Isn’t

Employment

The Resume Gap, Explained: How PCS Moves Turned Me Into a Professional Starter-Over

Employment

Jobs That Actually Work With Military Life (And Won’t Side-Eye Your Upcoming PCS)

In Case You Missed It

Why So Many Military Spouses Start Businesses (Hint: It’s Not Just the PCS Moves)

Using MyCAA Without Crying: A Beginner’s Guide to Free Education for Military Spouses

Going Back to School While Holding Down Literally Everything Else

Making Holiday Traditions That PCS With You

Creating Holiday Magic for Yourself as a Solo Spouse

Making Room for the Hard Stuff: Holiday Homesickness & Triggers

Terms of Use
Our Team
Advertise
Newsletter
Submit an Article
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
Compliance

Fall 2025

MSM_Fall25_Cover

Copyright © 2026 Military Spouse

Employment

Family

Lifestyle

Sitemap

No Result
View All Result
  • #5590 (no title)
  • 2016 Kensington Book Club
    • Author Guest Posts
    • Book Club Picks
    • Deals of the Month
    • Exclusive Excerpts
    • Giveaways
    • Recipes
  • 2017 Military Spouse Friendly Employers®
  • Account
  • Advertise
  • Affiliate Disclosure
  • Air Force
  • Army
  • Base SOY Survey
  • Base to Beaches
  • Brands
  • Career
  • Career Resources
  • Coast Guard
  • Compliance
  • Contact Us
  • Contests
    • Contest Rules
  • Deployment
  • Editorial Calendar – Our Themes
  • Education Resources
  • Giveaway Sign-up
  • Hangouts
  • Health
  • Home
  • Home 2
  • Home 3
  • Home 4
  • Home 5
  • Homeschooling
  • I Pledge to Embrace Video Page
  • Login
  • Logout
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Fall Issue
    • Fall Issue
    • January / February
    • July / August
    • March / April
    • May / June
    • November / December
    • September / October
    • Special Issue
    • Special Issue 2024
    • Spring
    • Spring Issue
    • Spring Issue
    • Winter
    • Winter Issue
    • Winter Issue
  • Malmstrom AFB SOY 2016 | Alexandra Fuller
  • Marine Corps
  • Members
  • Military Kids
  • Military Spouse [Live]
  • Military Spouse 2019 Media Partnership Guide
  • Military Spouse Education eNewsletter
  • Military Spouse Friendly Employers®
  • Military Spouse Media Partnership Guide
  • Military Spouse Partners
  • Military Spouse Quality of Life Survey
  • Military Spouse Student Leadership Award and Military Spouse Champions in Higher Education Award
  • Military Spouse Sweepstakes Official Rules (“Official Rules”)
  • Military Spouse Team
  • MILITARY SPOUSE: EDUCATION GUIDE
  • MILITARY SPOUSE: EMPLOYMENT GUIDE
  • MILITARY SPOUSE: PCS GUIDE
  • Military Spouse: Submit a calendar event
  • Money & More
  • MSOY Homepage
  • MSOY12
  • MSOY16 Live ☆
  • National Guard
  • Navy
  • Navy Mutual
  • New Spouse Email Series
  • Our Team
  • Password Reset
  • PCS
  • Privacy Policies
  • QAs
    • Submit a Question
  • Register
  • Share
    • Glossary
      • A
      • B
      • C
      • D
      • E
      • F
      • G
      • H
      • I
      • J
      • K
      • L
      • M
      • N
      • O
      • P
      • Q
      • R
      • S
      • Submit a Glossary Term
      • T
      • U
      • V
      • W
      • X
      • Y
      • Z
  • Share Your Military Lifestyle!
  • Share Your Photos
  • Simplify Your Crazy, Wonderful Military Life
  • Site Map
  • Small Businesses
  • Spouse 101 Download
  • SPOUSE 101 GUIDE
  • Starbucks
  • Submit an Article
  • Terms of Use
  • testing of the Gutenberg
  • Thank You
  • The Military Spouse Resource Collection
  • User

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.