Solutions
Childcare supports for every employer
We know that solving the childcare crisis will take a multitude of actors, solutions, policies, and at the end of the day—systemic change. The below solutions are some of the ways that employers can begin to make a difference.
All categories
Promote education & learning
Offer tax benefits
Invest in innovation
Foster a care culture
Provide childcare assistance
Advocate for public policy change
Enhance private policies
Case Studies
No more guessing on what's needed to fix the broken childcare system. Click through the carousel below to see solutions in action.
Case Studies
Patagonia
Patagonia provides 16 weeks of paid maternity leave, 12 weeks of paid paternity leave, and every family is given access to an on-site childcare center with extended days (enrollment is subsidized but not free). Parents can bring children into work, creating a culture that values family. They pay for a caretaker to accompany parents on business trips. After implementing these childcare policies, they saw a 95% retention rate for mothers at the company, leading to 30% of the costs recouped on providing these benefits. They also recouped 50% through tax benefits and 11% on employee engagement rates. With these calculations alone, Patagonia recovers 91% of the costs of childcare annually, excluding the obvious intangible benefits. After including intangible benefits, they estimate an ROI of 115- 125%.
Patagonia sees an ROI of 115-125% on their on-site childcare costs annually.
Stipends
Child-care stipends for parents who do not live near one of Patagonia’s child-care centers.
Paid Leave
4 weeks of paid pregnancy disability leave and/or 12 weeks of paid parental bonding leave
Health Care
Company-paid health care and sick time for all employees.