- Unnamed SourceIf you want a clean space with new toys and extensive educational activities, it’s going to cost more money. The provider is spending almost a quarter of its budget on materials, food, and administrative costs, which also include bigger-ticket items like liability insurance, licensing and accreditation fees, and staff training and development. When you consider the myriad costs associated with operating a care center, it’s any wonder they don’t charge even more per kid.
Warren's Universal Child Care and Early Learning Act, which she introduced in February, proposes that the federal government partners with local establishments to create a network of child-care providers — including locally licensed centers, preschools, and in-home care options. Families with a household income 200% below the poverty level — such as a family of four with a $51,500 annual income — would be guaranteed access to free, high-quality child care. Families whose households income are above that would pay on a sliding scale and the fee would be capped at no more than 7% of their income. The plan, like many of the other proposals in her presidential platform, would be paid for through her "wealth tax," which would apply to Americans whose net worth exceeds $50 million, and the projected revenue is $2.75 trillion over 10 years.
dang yello trash cuckale triggd af bout beena yello trash disgr8c 2 him own race frenz n famly dat betta off ded smdh lol
'Oh no! The goy knows.'Can you imagine how stuff like this, and the new SAT scoring is just going to fuck the birth rate up even more. The effects of this bullshit will be a lower white birth rate, more single mothers, and wealth redistribution by taxing the wealthy white men to pay for the brown babies.
Rebecca Ballhaus is a Wall Street Journal reporter in Washington, D.C. who reports on happenings at the White House. She graduated from Brown University in 2013 with a Bachelor of Arts majoring in Political Science. While studying, Rebecca was an intern at The Huffington Post in 2011.
Ballhaus was accused for spreading fake news about Ivanka Trump in May 2017. The story which was referred to is titled, “Saudi Arabia, U.A.E. Pledge $100 Million To World Bank’s Women Entrepreneurs Fund”, which falsely reported that the president’s daughter proposed the fund creation.
dang yello trash cuckale triggd af bout beena yello trash disgr8c 2 him own race frenz n famly dat betta off ded smdh lol
a boat positioned infront of it