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Senate committee advances bill to redefine infant, toddler ages to ease childcare shortages
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Summary
The Senate Human Services Committee passed SB 1200 to allow providers to serve children beginning at 18 months by changing age definitions (not ratios), a measure supporters say will increase capacity and help family childcare providers remain financially viable.
Senator Menjivar, the bill uthor, told the Senate Human Services Committee that SB 1200 would redefine the statutory ages for "infant" and "toddler" care so providers can shift 18- to 24-month-old children into toddler slots without changing staff-to-child ratios. "My bill is not looking to increase the number of ratios, but to redefine what we call an infant and what we call a toddler," she said, arguing the change would allow providers to better use existing capacity.
Jessie Reagan, a second-generation family childcare educator from Rosamond, said the mismatch between policy and how children are cared for is forcing family programs to close. "SB 1200 allows providers to serve children beginning at 18 which is aligning age definitions with child development," Reagan said, adding the bill "does not change ratios or safety requirements." Other small providers and the California Association for Adult Day Services also registered support, describing enrollment declines and operations at partial capacity.
Committee members praised the measure as a targeted, pragmatic step to increase access. One member said the bill was a "thoughtful and scientific measure" and pledged to support it. Senator Menjivar acknowledged the change is "not the magic bullet" but said it is one piece of a larger effort to make childcare financially sustainable for providers and reduce waiting lists.
Senator Weber moved to pass SB 1200 to the Appropriations Committee. A recorded roll call showed Senators Becker, Nilo, Laird and Weber Pearson voting aye; the motion carried 4-0 and the bill was reported out of committee.
The committee record shows supporters emphasized the bill ligns policy with existing practice and child development, while opponents did not appear at the hearing. Next steps: SB 1200 was referred to the Appropriations Committee for fiscal review.
