[Congressional Bills 105th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Con. Res. 202 Introduced in House (IH)]







105th CONGRESS
  2d Session
H. CON. RES. 202

Expressing the sense of the Congress that the Federal Government should 
     acknowledge the importance of at-home parents and should not 
discriminate against families who forego a second income in order for a 
          mother or father to be at home with their children.


_______________________________________________________________________


                    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                            January 27, 1998

Mr. Goodling (for himself, Mrs. Johnson of Connecticut, Mr. Greenwood, 
Mr. Cook, Mr. Blunt, Mr. Wolf, Mr. Hefley, Mr. Gallegly, Mr. Pitts, Mr. 
 Snowbarger, Mr. Shuster, Mr. Largent, and Mr. Bunning) submitted the 
following concurrent resolution; which was referred to the Committee on 
                      Education and the Workforce

_______________________________________________________________________

                         CONCURRENT RESOLUTION


 
Expressing the sense of the Congress that the Federal Government should 
     acknowledge the importance of at-home parents and should not 
discriminate against families who forego a second income in order for a 
          mother or father to be at home with their children.

Whereas studies have found that quality child care, particularly for infants and 
        young children, requires a sensitive, interactive, loving, and 
        consistent caregiver;
Whereas most parents meet and exceed the aforementioned criteria, circumstances 
        allowing, parental care marks the best form of child care;
Whereas the recent National Institute for Child Health and Development study 
        found that the greatest factor in the development of a young child is 
        ``what is happening at home and in families'';
Whereas a child's interaction with his or her parents has the most significant 
        impact on their development, any Federal child care policy should enable 
        and encourage parents to spend more time with their children;
Whereas 48 percent of mothers with preschool children under the age of 5 are 
        full-time at-home parents and another 34 percent of mothers work part-
        time in order to spend more time with their preschool children;
Whereas a large number of low- and middle-income families sacrifice a second 
        full-time income so that the mother may be at home with her child;
Whereas the average income of 2-parent families with a single income is $20,000 
        less than the average income of 2-parent families with two incomes;
Whereas only 30 percent of preschool children are in paid child care and the 
        remaining 70 percent of preschool children are in families that do not 
        pay for child care, many of which are low- to middle-income families 
        struggling to provide child care at home;
Whereas child care proposals should not provide financial assistance solely to 
        the 30 percent of families that pay for child care and should not 
        discriminate against families in which children are cared for by an at-
        home parent; and
Whereas any congressional proposal that increases child care funding should 
        provide financial relief to families that sacrifice an entire income in 
        order that a mother or father may be at home for their young child: Now, 
        therefore, be it
    Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring), 
That the Congress recognizes that--
            (1) many American families make enormous sacrifices to 
        forego a second income in order to have a parent care for their 
        child at home;
            (2) there should be no bias toward at-home parents;
            (3) child care assistance, when provided to families, 
        should be provided regardless of whether a child is cared for 
        by an at-home parent, family member, neighbor, or child care 
        center;
            (4) a key component to any quality child care proposal 
        should include financial relief for those families where there 
        is an at-home parent; and
            (5) mothers and fathers who have chosen and continue to 
        choose to be at home should be applauded for their efforts.
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