
Arizona launches $3 million after-school childcare grant program
Governor Katie Hobbs announced a $3 million statewide grant round aimed at lowering child-care costs for working families. The Bright Futures AZ Out-of-School Time program will support 59 providers and is expected to reach more than 2,500 children ages 5 to 12.
Arizona is putting new money into after-school and out-of-school care as affordability pressures continue to hit working families. Governor Katie Hobbs said the state will distribute $3 million through the Bright Futures AZ Out-of-School Time Grant Program, which is administered by the Department of Economic Security. The funding is set to support 59 providers across the state and help serve more than 2,500 children between 5 and 12 years old.
The announcement framed childcare as an economic issue as much as a family one. State officials said the grants could cut participating families’ childcare costs by roughly two-thirds, a notable reduction at a time when Arizona households are also absorbing higher bills for housing, food and transportation. Hobbs also rolled out a new provider search tool meant to help parents find care options more easily.
For Arizona residents, the importance of the program goes beyond a single funding round. After-school coverage is often the hardest gap for working parents to solve, especially when school hours and job schedules do not align. If the grants work as intended, they could help parents stay in the workforce, give providers steadier enrollment, and relieve some of the pressure in communities where affordable childcare remains hard to find.
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