Advocacy
2025 Policy Priorities
Infrastructure Grant Program Tax Issue
We are deeply concerned with the tax burden of the Infrastructure Grant Program (IGP) awards. We are working urgently to address this issue and deem IGP exempt from personal income and therefore nontaxable. We collected nearly 100 signatures from organizations and individuals on a letter submitted to Assemblymember Corey Jackson, Chair of Budget Subcommittee No. 2 on Human Services. We hope to pass an urgent measure in the coming months that includes language that clarifies these grants are exempt from state income tax.
2025-26 Budget Request to continue funding the Infrastructure Grant Program (IGP)
The Infrastructure Grant Program has supported over 5,000 child care providers with grants totaling over $350 million to fund repair and renovation projects to expand and enhance both home-based and center-based childcare facilities. This funding, while a historically large state investment, still did not serve all applicants. This year we will continue advocating to allocate more funding to this important program.
Learn more about the IGP here.
Reconciling Fire Code Requirements and Child Care Licensing Regulations
Recently in California, the Office of the State Fire Marshal (OSFM) published changes to the Title 24 Fire and Building Code that is at odds with state child care licensing regulations. The new fire regulation— for which no recent study has been conducted or cited—moves licensed child care facilities with more than five infants and toddlers into a new occupancy group (Group I-4 Occupancy) with increased requirements. Most notably, child care programs in Group I-4 must install an automatic fire sprinkler system. The costs to meet this code change are estimated at $100K–$200K per classroom, and without any additional funding to address the required changes.
Child care advocates, including Build Up CA, were able to pause the implementation of these changes in order to buy time for child care providers to prepare for potentially large and expensive facilities renovations, but this perhaps slows positive changes to child safety protocols. The crux of this issue is how to make child care facilities unquestionably safe for young children without imposing burdensome facilities requirements for child care providers and owners.
Build Up California is investing resources this year to research and advocate for policy solutions that keep child care facilities safe while prioritizing what is practical for providers.