2025 NYS Child Welfare Summit: Recap and Resources 

2025 NYS Child Welfare Summit: Recap and Resources 

On November 14, Schuyler Center, Fostering Youth Success Alliance, and Families Together in New York State hosted the NYS Child Welfare Summit in Albany. In attendance were nearly 100 participants, from advocates, to state agencies, researchers, and community members, including parents and young people. Together we filled the day with important discussions, human connection, and laughter. 

The Summit kicked off with a joint presentation introducing the Child and Family Wellbeing Action Network (CFWAN) and the data on the issues impacting children, young people, and families involved in New York’s child welfare system. The Action Network is working towards a vision of New York where the state prioritizes investing in and implementing policies that strengthen and support children, youth and families.

Following the presentation, sessions were held that focused on major issues in New York’s child welfare system and the solutions we and partners are working on to help resolve those issues: 

  • Conditions Families Raise Their Children In 
  • Narrowing the Front Door 
  • While in the System 
  • Supporting Youth Exiting the System 
  • Full Program

Links to presentations, handouts, and resources: 

Resources mentioned during panels: 

2026 Policy Priorities for Child and Family Wellbeing

2026 Policy Priorities for Child and Family Wellbeing

Download the 2026 policy priorities document here. 

During the 2026 New York State Legislative Session, Schuyler Center will prioritize policies and investments that improve health, wellbeing, and economic security of New York’s families, children, and communities, with a focus on New Yorkers who are working hard to make ends meet. While New York has made a statutory commitment to cut child poverty in half by 2032, the rate of children experiencing poverty across New York State remains high, with over 18% of all New York children experiencing poverty. Further, recent and pending federal actions have eliminated or weakened services that New York families rely on in times of need. This means it is more important than ever for New York leaders to act boldly and with urgency to advance policies and investments proven to reduce child poverty, strengthen families, and set up New York children to thrive.

(View the details on policies that will achieve each goal here.) 

  • Goal 1: Family Economic Security — Effectively implement and expand existing policies and adopt new approaches to reduce child poverty and racial inequity statewide
  • Goal 2: Child Care — Take substantial strides toward achieving statewide universal child care.
  • Goal 3: Children’s Health — Expand and increase investment in child and family health. 
  • Goal 4: Child Welfare — Transform child welfare by supporting families and communities.

Details on reaching each of the above goals can be found in the full 2026 Policy Priorities document

Care is Work. Pay is Respect.

Care is Work. Pay is Respect.

“Care is Work. Pay is Respect.” 

by Adanech Makey, Policy and Community Engagement Specialist

As the daughter of a paraeducator who spent her days in kindergarten classrooms, I grew up seeing what early care looks like up close: the joyful chaos of morning hellos, tiny victories as letters click into words, and the comfort of a trusted adult when big feelings overwhelm small bodies. On the days my school was closed, I tagged along with my mom and saw—clearly—the difference it makes when children arrive ready to learn and when they don’t. Those experiences led me to volunteer in a preschool classroom during college and, ultimately, to a career working alongside child care providers from Washington, D.C., to the Seattle region, and now New York. 

Everywhere I’ve been, one truth remains: this is one of the hardest-working fields filled with some of the most passionate, nurturing, fun, and determined people you’ll ever meet—and it is systemically underpaid and undervalued. 

Fair pay for child care workers isn’t a perk—it’s the foundation for quality, stability, equity, and family wellbeing. 

When we discuss the child care crisis, we often focus on families who can’t find or afford care. That’s real. However, we talk far less about the workforce that makes care possible. From our country’s earliest days—when enslaved Black women were forced to provide care without compensation—care work has been essential and yet chronically devalued. Today, that legacy persists: Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander women—and women overall—still disproportionately make up this workforce and remain among the lowest-paid workers in our state. 

New York cannot build a high-quality, stable child care system with low wages. Programs can’t hire or keep staff. Turnover disrupts the relationships children rely on. And too many providers—people who care for our kids—struggle to care for their own. 

A thriving child care workforce impacts everyone. Children thrive with consistent, trusted relationships. Stable staff = better outcomes. Families can work, study, and plan when programs aren’t constantly short-staffed or closing rooms. Providers can stay in the jobs they love when they’re paid enough to live with dignity. Communities gain a stronger economy when parents participate in the workforce and local programs remain open. We all benefit from being a part of this movement!  

What We’re Asking For

New York has taken steps to expand access to child care. Now we need leaders to be audacious in ensuring equitable pay for the workforce. That means investing in compensation that reflects the professional skill, emotional labor, and developmental expertise child care demands. 

We are grateful for the legislative champions who’ve stood with providers across the state. And we invite more leaders—especially those focused on increasing access—to join us in addressing the root cause of instability: compensation. 

Take Action: Use the Toolkit

Help us keep the focus where it belongs—on the people making care possible. 

  • Host a community conversation about the realities and solutions at your center, library, or neighborhood meeting. 

👉 Get the Toolkit: https://empirestatechildcare.org/support-the-child-care-workforce/ 

Join the Conversation

We’re running this campaign throughout the fall and hope the messages resonate with child care providers across New York State. Let’s use it as an invitation—to listen, to learn, and to act together. Equitable pay is a social justice issue, a racial equity issue, and a child wellbeing issue. 

If you’d like to host a community conversation, please contact Adanech Makey at amakey@scaany.org.